Loading...
2,660 illustrations across all 24 chapters
In Luke 4:1-13, we remember: trouble can’t cancel God’s promises—today, not someday.
SermonWise.ai generates complete sermon outlines for any passage across 17 theological traditions. Try it with Luke.
In Luke 8:26-39, the Spirit turns ordinary people into bold messengers of Jesus—today, not someday.
Luke 10:38-42 calls our “goodness” what it is without Christ: insufficient—today, not someday.
Luke 13:10-17 invites solidarity: the suffering of the poor is a holy summons—today, not someday.
Luke 13:31-35 challenges spiritual passivity—grace is not an excuse to stay unchanged—today, not someday.
Luke 12:32-40 shows the gospel pattern—God initiates grace, then forms a people who obey in love.
Luke 16:1-13 exposes vague spirituality; only Christ saves—today, not someday.
Luke 9:51-62 offers holy endurance: God gives strength for the long road and joy for the weary.
Luke 24:13-35 Jeremiah 8:18-9:1, God’s mercy is not a moment; it is a life we learn through prayer and love.
In Luke 11:1-13, the via media holds: doctrine with humility, practice with reverence—today, not someday.
In Luke 11:1-13, salvation is not mere pardon; it is holiness, perfected in love—today, not someday.
Luke 13:31-35 invites us to join what God is already doing in our streets and homes.
Luke 11:1-13 insists that faith means following Jesus, even when it costs—today, not someday.
Luke 6:17-26 exposes pious excuses—if faith never costs power, it’s probably not liberation—today, not someday.
Luke 6:39-49 gives Law and Gospel: God exposes our need, then gives Christ as our righteousness.
Luke 5:1-11 confronts comfortable religion—God sides with the exploited, not the exploiters—today, not someday.
Luke 4:14-21 traces the red thread to Jesus—He is the meaning beneath the words—today, not someday.
Luke 4:14-21 invites us to join what God is already doing in our streets and homes.
If Luke 6:39-49 sounds political, remember: oppression is already political—today, not someday.
Luke 2:15-21 1-21 reminds us: you don’t have to be impressive to be sent—just faithful and available.
If Luke 18:9-14 never disrupts comfort, it may be tradition pretending to be fire—today, not someday.
Luke 16:19-31 exposes cheap belief—saving faith produces obedience—today, not someday.
Luke 13:10-17 speaks hope under pressure—God hears the cry and bends history toward freedom—today, not someday.
In Luke 16:19-31, Christ meets us as Physician, tending wounds we can’t name—today, not someday.