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Sermon Illustrations for Trinity Sunday (2024)

Illustration
Isaiah 6:1-8
I came across this story and thought it fit this passage very well. A young lady who was trying to explain her going to a questionable place of amusement told her friend that she thought a Christian could go anywhere. Her friend answered, “She can, but I am reminded of a little incident which happened last summer when I went with a party of friends to explore a coal mine. One of the girls came in a white gown. When her friends questioned her, she appealed to the old miner who was the group guide, ‘Can’t I wear a white dress down into the mine?’ Yes,’ replied the old man, ‘there is nothing to keep you from wearing a white dress down there, but there will be considerable things to keep you from wearing one back.’”

Holiness and purity matter. When Isaiah witnessed the holiness and purity of the Lord, he was struck with his own sinfulness. “Woe is me! I am lost, for I am a man of unclean lips, and I live among a people of unclean lips, yet my eyes have seen the King, the Lord of hosts!” The holiness of the Lord highlighted his sinfulness even more than a dirty coal mine dirties a white dress.

God is holy. Left to our own devices, we are not. It is only through God’s act of sending Jesus that we are cleansed and made worthy. When we witness the awesome holiness of God, how can we not want to be holy? C.S. Lewis once wrote, “How little people know who think that holiness is dull. When one meets the real thing, it is irresistible.”
Bill T.

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Isaiah 6:1-8
I want this scene to be portrayed, at least in our mind’s eye, bright, vivid, loud, and startling to the point of knock-kneed fear. I want our innards shaken until we can barely control ourselves, and our calves turned to jelly so that we can hardly stand. I don’t want us to say, “Awesome!” I want us so awe-struck we want to run away, but can’t, because we’re frozen in place, unable to say a word.

If you need help feeling helpless, just remember, Seraphs seem to be winged snakes breathing fiery, burning venom. Probably not dragons but you’re going to be too frightened to know the difference. Unworthy to stand there in the presence of such glory. Yeah. Unfortunately also too frightened to run, and trust me, it’s going to sound as if someone else is speaking when we hear ourselves say, “Here am I. Send me!”
Frank R.

* * *

Romans 8:12-17
Martin Luther summarized this text in one of his sermons on it. He proclaimed that everything of this [sinful] nature must be shunned by Christians (who have the Holy Spirit and are hence able to judge what is carnal)... (Complete Sermons, Vol.4/2, p.171)

One of Billy Graham’s comments is right in line with the first reformer. He is reported to have said that “Many people have come to Christ as a result of my participation in presenting the Gospel to them. [But] It was all the work of the Holy Spirit.”

For those wondering what such a focus on the Spirit has to do with the Trinity theme, one of Augustine’s concrete ways of depicting the Trinity is most relevant and could communicate well with laity. He claimed that God is three in one, like persons are three in unity — possessing understanding, memory, and will (Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers, First Series, Vol.3, pp.140-141). The Father is understanding, the Son is God’s memory (of understanding) and the Spirit is God’s Will (acting on what God knows). It follows, then, that to have the Spirit is to participate in God’s will, to have power to overcome the world’s ways. If the preacher has a preference for focusing more on the Trinity, other Trinitarian images used by Augustine can illuminate the doctrine for laity. These include the Trinity as akin to a tree comprised of root, trunk, and branches or the Trinity construed as water in three forms — a fountain, a river, or contained in a drinking vessel (Ibid., p.328).
Mark E.

* * *

John 3:1-17
Dr. Paul Chappell shared this story in Our Daily Bread. A young girl who accepted Christ as her Savior was sharing her story with a few people at her church. “Were you a sinner before you received the Lord Jesus into your life?” an old man asked. “Yes, sir,” she replied.

“Well, are you still a sinner?” he continued.

“To tell you the truth,” she said, “I feel I’m a greater sinner than I ever was.”

“Then what real change have you experienced?”

“I don’t quite know how to explain it,” she said, “except I used to be a sinner running after sin, but now that I am saved. I’m a sinner running from sin!”

Salvation is found in Jesus Christ alone. In one of the most popular verses in the Bible, Jesus says, “For God so loved the world that he gave his only Son, so that everyone who believes in him may not perish but may have eternal life” (vs. 16). Andrew Murray once said, “Salvation comes through a cross and a crucified Christ.”
Bill T.

* * *

John 3:1-17
The trouble with a verse like John 3:16, one that’s so iconic many people have it memorized (and occasionally mis-memorized, but that’s another issue), is that people think they already know this so well that they don’t listen. They’re not alone. Sometimes we preachers don’t listen to scripture, either. We think we can recite a verse and it speaks for itself and our job is done.

Say it slowly, stretch it out, especially the word “loved” and the words “have — eternal — life.” What else is there to say.

But John has been layering several layers of meaning in every sentence of his gospel, and it might help if you were to lay out the commentaries and begin all over again, as if you were about to preach from Haggai or Zephaniah.

At the very least, consider. God’s actions are not only revealed in this verse, but also in the verses that follow. Our possible responses are laid out, and these words are a reminder that despite God’s glorious intentions, God is allowing us to make a choice. Our response is just as crucial, and laden with as much power, as God’s choices — not because we matter all that much, but because God gives us this power. Jesus said that some “people loved darkness rather than light….” (3:19). We can accept or reject this wonderful gift. That says something very important about the audacious plan of God to save all — and yet give all a choice.
Frank R.

* * *

John 3:1-17
John Calvin spoke of the wonderful security and boldness we have as born-again Christians. He wrote:

True indeed, we must hold by this principle that our faith be founded on God. But when we have God as our security, we ought, like persons elevated above the heavens, boldly to tread the whole world under our feet, or regard it with lofty disdain. (Calvin’s Commentaries, Vol.XVII/2, p.118)

Martin Luther echoes similar confidence:

This teaching produces hearts that are stout, courageous in affliction and the temptation to sin, confident and fearless hearts that declare: Even though I have been stung by the devil and his hellish point... nevertheless I believe and am convinced that my Lord Jesus Christ bore my sins on the Cross... (Complete Sermons, Vol.6, p.221)

The text has implications for the Trinity in the first reformer’s view:

Christ wants to prevent us from thinking of Him as separate from the Father. Therefore He again directs our mind from Himself to the Father and says that the Father’s love for us is just as strong as profound as His own... (Luther’s Works, Vol.22,     355)

Augustine offers another version of the Trinity which helps us further understand the certainty in God’s love that the born-again Christian has. Born again in the Spirit, Christians receive the love of God Who binds together Father and Son. As the African Father put it:

Therefore the Holy Spirit, whatever It is, is something common to both Father and Son. But the communion itself in consubstantial and co-eternal; and it may fitly be Friendship, let it be so called; but it is more aptly called love. (Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers, First Series, Vol.3, p.100)

The Sprit which is the love making Father and Son One cannot but make us loving and steadfast when the Spirit is poured out on us.
Mark E.
UPCOMING WEEKS
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John Jamison
Object: You may present this message as a simple story, or have the children act it out as a role-play. I will show the role-play version, but you can ignore the acting pieces and just tell the story if you prefer.

Note: For the role-play version, you will need to select two girls and one boy to play the roles. You might also have a broom and a dust rag if you want to.

* * *

Hello, everyone! (Let them respond.) Are you ready for our story today? (Let them respond.) Great! Let’s get started.

The Immediate Word

Mary Austin
Dean Feldmeyer
Christopher Keating
Thomas Willadsen
George Reed
Katy Stenta
Nazish Naseem
For July 20, 2025:

Emphasis Preaching Journal

Mark Ellingsen
Bill Thomas
Frank Ramirez
Bonnie Bates
Amos 8:1-12, Psalm 52
Amos proclaims the word from God that punishes the people. The people are to be punished for their lack of faith, for their focus on practicing deceit, betraying honesty to their neighbors, and being impatient for the time after the Sabbath when they can focus on profit and selling their crops and wares. Oh, my! What a terrible message for people. You have been unfaithful so I will punish you. And then in the psalm, God is proclaimed to be the olive tree, that which brings blessing.
David Kalas
I have tried to find different ways of saying it so that my children don’t tire of hearing it. But the basic principle remains the same, and my kids have heard it a ton. “First things first.” They ask if they can do this or they start to do that, and I will endeavor to redirect them, saying, “Why don’t we make sure we’re doing first things first!”

StoryShare

John E. Sumwalt
I am now rejoicing in my sufferings for your sake, and in my flesh I am completing what is lacking in Christ’s afflictions for the sake of his body, that is, the church. (v. 24)

The Village Shepherd

Janice B. Scott
One of Martha's earliest memories was of her little sister Mary singing and dancing in the middle of an admiring crowd of friends. Mary had always been a dancer, from the time she could walk. Privately, Martha thought she'd always been something of a show-off and ought to go on the stage, for Mary loved an audience.

SermonStudio

John E. Sumwalt
Jeanne Jones
Several years ago, before we moved to Wisconsin, I was an honorary nanny for our pastor's son, Jonathan. I took care of him from the time he was able to walk until our pastor moved, when Jonathan was about five. We had wonderful times together. One time, when I was at their house, and we had been doing some spiritual direction together, Pastor Michael asked me if I knew the name of my guardian angel.
James Evans
We are not surprised when we learn about crooks and robbers boasting about "mischief done against the godly" or "plotting destruction" all day long. The image we have in our minds about who "bad" people are, and how they conduct themselves, make such accusations completely plausible. We are less inclined to believe such things about leaders, especially respected leaders among us. We have difficulty believing someone with wealth and power would deliberately plot to do someone else harm.
Arley K. Fadness
Today's gospel from Luke 10 follows the parable of the good Samaritan. Luke positions the good Samaritan and the Mary-Martha story back to back for good reason. The parable and the story are examples of the Great Commandment "to love the Lord your God with all your heart and your neighbor as yourself." The good Samaritan parable illustrates "love to neighbor," whereas the Mary-Martha story illustrates "love to God."
Kirk R. Webster
In the early 1990s, Wesley Nunley of Dallas completed a project he had dreamed of for decades. "I tell you, this could be a big thing," he explained. Wes then walked out to a concrete octagon in the middle of his backyard. With a beaming smile, arms raised up in excitement, the energetic retiree said, "This welcomes the UFO to land, which has never been done before."
John W. Wurster
It was the best of times. A time of prosperity and confidence, a time of relative peace, a time when most everything looked pretty good, a time when most everyone felt pretty good. It was a time maybe not unlike our own time.
H. Burnham Kirkland
Words Of Assurance
Our God is both wise and caring: afflicting the comfortable and comforting the afflicted.

Pastoral Prayer
God, we bow before you this morning, knowing that you hear every prayer. We know that in all of Creation, you are the source of life. You are the one who set the light swirling between the galaxies. The breath of your Spirit pulses through all life. You have even become flesh among us. We praise you, Lord, that in all your wonder, you have not forgotten us.

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