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John 3:1-17

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In his wonderful book, By... -- John 3:1-17 -- Trinity Sunday | 1st Sunday after Pentecost - B -- 2000
In his wonderful book, By the Bonnie Briar Bush, Ian Maclaren tells of a brokenhearted father, Lachl
This passage reminds us that... -- John 3:1-17 -- Trinity Sunday | 1st Sunday after Pentecost - B -- 2000
This passage reminds us that love is at the heart of the Christian message.
Tanya Luhrmann, associate professor of... -- John 3:1-17 -- Second Sunday in Lent - A -- 1999
Tanya Luhrmann, associate professor of anthropology at the University of California - San Diego, and
I once counseled an individual... -- John 3:1-17 -- Second Sunday in Lent - A -- 1999
I once counseled an individual who had a very technical mind.
The gospel passage tells that... -- John 3:1-17 -- Second Sunday in Lent - A -- 1999
The gospel passage tells that God helps us to be born anew, giving us a new direction in our lives.
At a Bereavement Support meeting... -- John 3:1-17 -- Second Sunday in Lent - A -- 1999
At a Bereavement Support meeting a new widow said, "I thought I understood what the death of a spous
She was 65 in 1975... -- John 3:1-17 -- Second Sunday in Lent - A -- 1996
She was 65 in 1975 and a member of the U.S. House of Representatives.
The young chemist was at... -- John 3:1-17 -- Second Sunday in Lent - A -- 1996
The young chemist was at a critical point in her research.
Each year on the island... -- John 3:1-17 -- Second Sunday in Lent - A -- 1996
Each year on the island of Corsica, during the Holy Week period, a grotesque lump of a man struggles
All children have a favorite... -- John 3:1-17 -- Second Sunday in Lent - A -- 1996
All children have a favorite book.
BalloonsMemories rise like... -- John 3:1-17 -- Trinity Sunday | 1st Sunday after Pentecost - B -- 1994
BalloonsMemories rise like bright balloonsriding mind-born winds,
Once there was an unattractive... -- John 3:1-17 -- Trinity Sunday | 1st Sunday after Pentecost - B -- 1994
Once there was an unattractive, shy, unpopular little orphan girl who was considered to be a problem
The wind was rushing in... -- John 3:1-17 -- Trinity Sunday | 1st Sunday after Pentecost - B -- 1991
The wind was rushing in from the storm at sea.
In one congregation where I... -- John 3:1-17 -- Trinity Sunday | 1st Sunday after Pentecost - B -- 1991
In one congregation where I served on the pastoral staff of a downtown church we had a young psychia
When we worry about being... -- John 3:1-17 -- Trinity Sunday | 1st Sunday after Pentecost - B -- 1991
When we worry about being acceptable to God, we need to remember that Christ came because of God's g
Nicodemus had lots of questions... -- John 3:1-17 -- Second Sunday in Lent - A
Nicodemus had lots of questions for Jesus. He was an inquisitive student.
The twelfth-century mystic, Hildegard... -- John 3:1-17 -- Second Sunday in Lent - A
The twelfth-century mystic, Hildegard of Bingen, once told a little parable:
In the first century a... -- John 3:1-17 -- Second Sunday in Lent - A
In the first century a Roman adversary of the church named Celsus wrote a book challenging the lords
Many believe that Nicodemus was... -- John 3:1-17 -- Second Sunday in Lent - A
Many believe that Nicodemus was a secret believer in Jesus, one who kept his faith under wraps due t
Nicodemus came to Jesus at... -- John 3:1-17 -- Trinity Sunday | 1st Sunday after Pentecost - B
Nicodemus came to Jesus at night.
A man from Portland, Oregon... -- John 3:1-17 -- Trinity Sunday | 1st Sunday after Pentecost - B
A man from Portland, Oregon, tried an old-fashioned way to woo his lady.

The Immediate Word

"who's Your Daddy?" -- Isaiah 6:1-8, Romans 8:12-17, John 3:1-17 -- Carlos Wilton -- Trinity Sunday | 1st Sunday after Pentecost - B
Dear Fellow Preacher,
The Keeper -- John 3:1-17, Romans 4:1-5, 13-17, Genesis 12:1-4, Psalm 121 -- Carlos Wilton -- Second Sunday in Lent - A
Dear Fellow Preacher,Serious proposals for radical change in the U.S. Social Security
A Preternaturally Gifted Triune God -- John 3:1-17, Romans 8:12-17, Isaiah 6:1-8 -- Carter Shelley, Thom M. Shuman -- Trinity Sunday | 1st Sunday after Pentecost - B
As we make our way into the 21st century, our world faces a host of challenges that potentially enda

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The Immediate Word

Christopher Keating
Thomas Willadsen
Katy Stenta
Mary Austin
Nazish Naseem
Dean Feldmeyer
George Reed
For October 19, 2025:

Emphasis Preaching Journal

Mark Ellingsen
Bill Thomas
Frank Ramirez
Jeremiah 31:27-34
John Calvin makes very clear why a new covenant is needed according to this text. He observes:

… the fault was not to be sought in the law that there was need of a new covenant, for the law was abundantly sufficient, but that fault was in the levity and the unfaithfulness of the people. (Calvin’s Commentaries, Vol.X/2, p.130)
David Coffin
What happens when one’s past life narrative or goals in life have drastically shifted or collapsed? How do they rebuild hope? For Israel, they lost their land, monarchy, and national identity. In the days of the New Testament,they could easily be identified as living in the “fourth world” country. That is, existing in substandard conditions in one’s own native land?

StoryShare

Peter Andrew Smith
Rose sat back in her chair and opened her magazine. She heard the thump of the stairs and caught a glimpse of her daughter and son in the corner of her eye. She turned her head as they put water bottles in their backpacks.

“What are you two doing?” she looked over at the clock. “Don’t you have homework?”

“All done,” Paul and Linda announced at the same time.

Rose ignored Linda but locked eyes with Paul. He met her gaze for a few moments and then sighed.

“Okay, I’m almost done but still have some math questions,” he admitted.

The Village Shepherd

Janice B. Scott
Call to Worship:

Jesus told us that we should always pray and not lose heart, for God is on our side. In our worship today let us pray to the Lord for the needs of others and for all our own needs.


Invitation to Confession:

Jesus, sometimes you don't seem to be there when I pray and I feel like I'm talking to myself.

Lord, have mercy.

Jesus, sometimes my prayers seem so dry and boring that I give up.

Christ, have mercy.

SermonStudio

James Evans
Psalm 119 is well-known as the longest chapter in the Bible. The poem is actually an extended, and extensive, meditation on the meaning of the law. Given the sterile connotations often associated with "law" and "legalism," it's hard sometimes to appreciate the lyrical beauty of these reflections. One thing is for certain, the writer of this psalm does not view the law as either sterile or void of vitality.

Schuyler Rhodes
There is perhaps no better feeling than knowing that someone "has your back." Having someone's back is a term that arose from urban street fighting where a partner or ally would stay with you and protect your back in the thick of the fray. When someone has your back, you don't worry about being hit from behind. When someone has your back you can concentrate on the struggle in front of you without worrying about dangers you cannot see. When someone has your back you feel protected, secure, safe.
David Kalas
I wonder how many of us here are named after someone.

Chances are that a good many of us carry family names. We are named for a parent, a grandparent, an uncle, or an aunt somewhere on the family tree. Others of us had parents who named us after a character in the Bible, or perhaps some other significant character from history.

All told, I expect a pretty fair number of us are named after someone else.

John W. Clarke
Our reading today from the prophet Jeremiah is one in which the Hebrew people, not knowing what else to do in terms of addressing their predicament, decide to blame it all on God. They believed their problems to be the result of their sins and the sins of their fathers. Of course, one person's sin does indeed affect other people, but all people are still held personally accountable for the sin in their own lives (Deuteronomy 24:16; Ezekiel 18:2).
Donna E. Schaper
As usual, the epistle is a little more graphic than we can quite grasp. Itchy ears: what a concept just in physical terms. Experience it for a minute. You itch, you scratch, you sort of know you shouldn't scratch because it will only make the itch worse. But still you scratch, while wondering how the itch ever got started in the first place. What a concept: itchy ears as a vehicle for spiritual truth.

John E. Berger
Did Jesus ever do comedy? Indeed he did, and the Parable of the Unjust Judge is partly comic monologue. The routine began with a probate judge so ridiculously dishonest that he announced, "... I have no fear of God and no respect for anyone...." (There must have been a gasp of disbelief from Jesus' audience.)

The Unjust Judge was nagged by a widow, however, who had every right to nag, because she had been cheated by somebody in the community. A good judge would have helped the widow, but remember, this judge "neither feared God nor had respect for people."

CSSPlus

And will not God grant justice to his chosen ones who cry to him day and night? Will he delay long in helping them? (v. 7)

Good morning, boys and girls. Yesterday, I was riding in my car and I kept hearing this noise. I call it a squeak. Do you know what a squeak sounds like? (let them answer) Squeaks are very annoying. It is hard to find a squeak in your car, so it is still squeaking.

I also have a chair that has a squeak and I brought it in with me today because it is

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