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816 illustrations — Quotes from Lewis, Stott, Bonhoeffer, and other theologians
"The 'way of escape' is often the community itself—brothers and sisters who hold us accountable, who know our weaknesses, who pray for us. Individualist Christianity faces temptation alone; the church faces it together. God provides escape through the body." — Stanley Hauerwas.
SermonWise.ai generates complete sermon outlines for any passage across 17 theological traditions.
"Christ died for sinners—for YOU. While YOU were a sinner, Christ died for YOU. This is personal: not just humanity in general but YOU specifically. God demonstrated HIS love toward YOU. Will YOU receive this gift? The invitation is personal;...
"Immeasurably more—now and forever! In this age, God exceeds our expectations; in the age to come, abundantly more. Glory in the church throughout all generations—this spans ages, dispensations, eternity. What begins now overflows forever." — Warren Wiersbe. Dispensational: eternal abundance.
"'He cares for you'—and the 'He' is the crucified and risen Christ. On the cross, He took our cares, our sins, our death. We cast our anxieties on the One who has already borne the ultimate burden. In Christ, our...
"I AM come—Christ Himself is the coming of life. That THEY might have LIFE—life is found only in Him. And have it ABUNDANTLY—Christ is inexhaustible. He is not merely the giver of life; He IS life. Apart from Him is...
"Waiting on God is not inactivity but receptivity. We open ourselves to divine strength; we position ourselves for renewal. God gives the power; we must receive it. The promise is conditional: THOSE WHO WAIT shall renew. Wait actively, expectantly." — E.
"Taste and see—in a world of scarcity anxiety, God offers abundance to taste. The empire says 'never enough'; God says 'taste My goodness.' Those who taste justice know God is good; those who experience liberation know His sweetness. Share the feast." — Walter Brueggemann.
"Paul stretches language to express the inexpressible: nothing in height or depth, present or future, life or death. Because God's love is infinite—and the infinite cannot be limited or separated. We are held by divine love that has no boundaries,...
"'Create and make in us new and contrite hearts'—so we pray in the Collect. Weekly, daily, we ask for cleansing. The liturgy forms us: confession, absolution, renewal. The clean heart is the praying heart, the worshipping heart, formed by the...
"When God's presence shows up, fear has to leave! 'I am with you'—when the King arrives, fear bows. Soak in His presence; let it displace every anxiety. His right hand upholds supernaturally. You're not just surviving—you're THRIVING in His presence!" — Bill Johnson.
"God IS love—Deus Caritas Est. Perfect love is not our achievement but our participation in divine love through sacraments, prayer, community. Servile fear yields to filial love; we approach God not as slaves but as children. Love transforms fear into...
"Be still—soak in His presence! In the stillness, God's glory fills the room. We don't just think about God; we ENCOUNTER Him! Stillness positions us for the supernatural. When we stop striving, the Spirit moves. Be still and EXPERIENCE that...
"'Lean not on your own understanding' includes our political calculations, our strategic plans, our confident ideologies. Trusting God means remaining open to divine surprises that upend our certainties. The path God makes straight may not be the one we mapped." — Jim Wallis.
"Fear has been the constant companion of Black folk in America—fear of violence, fear of deprivation, fear of tomorrow. But God has given a Spirit not of fear! Power to stand, love to persist, sound mind to strategize. The Spirit...
"The 'all things' Paul can do are the things Christ has appointed for him to do. This is not a blank check for personal ambition but a promise for Christ-appointed tasks. Whatever God calls you to, He enables—but He enables...
"Reason is a beautiful thing, but it must know its limits. 'Lean not on your own understanding'—reason submitted to revelation. Faith goes where reason cannot follow. Trust God's promise even when it contradicts your calculations." — Martin Luther. Lutheran: faith over reason.
"Be strong and courageous—this is command coupled with promise. We are not told to manufacture courage but to receive it from God's presence. 'The Lord your God is WITH you'—this is the ground of courage. His presence makes the impossible possible." — Charles Spurgeon.
"This vision sustains mission: we work toward a world without tears. God's future breaks into our present; we are signs of coming comfort. Every tear we wipe now anticipates the final wiping. Mission is participating in God's tear-ending work." — Lesslie Newbigin.
"Salvation is God's gift—entirely, completely. Yet Orthodoxy speaks of synergy: not that we add to grace, but that grace transforms us into participants. We are saved by grace through faith—faith that is itself grace's gift, making us co-workers with God." — Kallistos Ware.
"The living sacrifice is costly discipleship—no cheap grace that demands nothing. 'Present your bodies'—concrete, embodied obedience. Not just thoughts transformed but lives offered. The renewed mind leads to changed action in the world." — Dietrich Bonhoeffer. Lutheran: costly, embodied discipleship.
"As prophetic signs multiply and the world grows more anxious, believers have a resource: prayer that produces peace. 'The Lord is at hand'—His return is near! This blessed hope dispels anxiety. Whatever comes prophetically, His peace guards us until He comes." — Warren Wiersbe.
"Micah 6:8 is sanctification summarized: works of mercy (justice and kindness) flowing from works of piety (walking humbly with God). Personal holiness produces social holiness. These cannot be separated: love God (humble walk), love neighbor (justice and mercy)." — John Wesley.
"Paul wrote this from prison—not from a victory parade. The 'all things' include suffering for justice, enduring for righteousness, persisting when the powerful push back. Christ's strength is for the long haul of justice work, not for personal success." — Jim Wallis.
"Those who have tasted life's bitterness—oppression, rejection, suffering—know God's goodness is sweeter still. The disinherited taste the Lord and find Him good even when circumstances are bitter. This is sustaining faith: tasting God's goodness in the midst of hardship." — Howard Thurman.