Wednesday, March 30, 2016

Running - John Piper Sermon Jam

Come All Who Are Thirsty - Sermon Jam

Come and Know Me - Joshua Kehler Sermon Jam

Look at the Birds - Scripture Jam

Desperation - Mackey Hironaka Sermon Jam

Fighting For Joy - John Piper Sermon Jam

See His Beauty - John Piper Sermon Jam

More Loved Than You Imagine - John Piper Sermon Jam

Can a Mother Forget - Tim Keller Sermon Jam

Friday, March 18, 2016

Message of the Silent Years - J Vernon McGee - FULL Sunday Sermons

Changing Bitter Waters To Sweet, Exodus 15 - J Vernon McGee - FULL Sunday Sermons

A Fresh Baptism of the Holy Spirit - David Wilkerson

L’immersion dans le Saint-Esprit - Derek Prince



Nous allons aujourd’hui aborder le sujet du baptême dans le Saint-Esprit à travers ce message intitulé ‘l’immersion dans le Saint-Esprit’ de la série d’enseignements ‘Poser les fondations’. Ce thème est souvent un sujet de discussion controversé dans les différentes dénominations chrétiennes et Derek Prince nous guide dans cette étude de façon exacte et minutieuse selon la Bible.

Derek Prince (1915-2003) a fait ses études à Eton et à Cambridge, puis il a rempli la fonction de professeur de philosophie à Cambridge de 1940 à 1949. Pendant la Seconde Guerre mondiale, sa vie fut transformée lors d’une rencontre personnelle avec Jésus-Christ. Il est reconnu aujourd’hui comme l’un des principaux enseignants de la Bible de notre époque.

French Language-At the End of TimeFr- Derek Prince

Invisible Barriers to Healing

Thursday, March 10, 2016

Mark Dever: "The Day of the Lord" (1 Thessalonians 4:13–5:11)

Don Carson: "The Lord Is There" (Ezekiel 40–48)

March 6, 2016 - Carter Conlon - Evil Is At The Gate

Aaron Ivey on Why It's Important to Express the Glory of Jesus in New and Creative Ways

Russell Moore on Spiritual Warfare

Don Carson on the Ground of Our Assurance

 TGC’s president, Don Carson.

Full sermon: http://www.desiringgod.org/messages/h...

A Biblical Theology of Revival - Tim Keller (TGC13 Workshop)

What Role Should the Bible Have in Society? (Tim Keller, Alister McGrath, Brian McLaren)

The Supremacy of Christ (Sermon Jam) - John Piper

God In Control John Piper

Tuesday, March 8, 2016

Tim Keller - Real Passion

Image result for Tim Keller

VIEW HERE



Robert George - Natural Law, God, and Human Dignity

Natural law theorists believe that since all humans are made in the image of God, every person possesses irreducible capacities for rationality, freedom, and moral discernment. Natural law theorists argue that these shared natural capacities can function as a common language between Christians and non-Christians as all of us try to make sense of life's most difficult questions.

This lecture was given as part of the Gospel & Culture Lecture series featuring Robert George. Robert George is McCormick Professor of Jurisprudence at Princeton University. He has served on the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights and the President's Council on Bioethics. He was a Judicial Fellow at the Supreme Court of the United States, where he received the Justice Tom C. Clark Award.

Leo Schuster - Priestly Work

In the Old Testament, the priests had a specific and privileged function. God appointed them to be the mediators between God and His people. The New Testament, however, teaches that all Christians are called to be priests. When we apply this to our work, it means three things. First, we have a deep purpose for our work because we can worship God through our work. Second, we assume a humble posture, thinking not of ourselves but how we can serve others in our workplaces. Lastly, we consider our work a high privilege since we were called to our vocations by God.

Os Guinness - Challenging the Darkness: Towards a New Christian Renaissance

As we discuss how the church can engage an increasingly post-Christian culture in the west, it is helpful to take a step back from our own times and historically examine how Christianity has dealt with cultures that seemed implacably opposed to it. Christianity was never expected to convert the Roman empire; nor was it expected to convert the barbarian tribes after Rome fell. Yet, it both cases it succeeded despite the odds. Similarly today, Christians must hold onto hope for a revival in the modern west.

This lecture was given as part of the Gospel & Culture Lecture series featuring Os Guinness. Os Guinness is an author and social critic. Great-great grandson of Arthur Guinness, the Dublin brewer, he was born in China in World War Two where his parents were medical missionaries. A witness to the climax of the Chinese revolution in 1949, he was expelled with many other foreigners in 1951 and returned to Europe where he was educated in England.

Jeff Van Duzer - Why Business Matters to God

Too often Christian businesspeople think that their work's sole purpose is to generate money that they can donate to more "spiritual" causes. But what about business itself? Does God care about that? The Bible teaches that before the fall—in God's perfect creation—humans were called to work. Since God created people to work, God desires businesses to provide opportunities for individuals to express their God-given identity in meaningful and creative work. In this paradigm, profit ceases to be an end in itself. Instead, profit becomes the means by which a business produces goods and services which enables a community's flourishing.

This lecture was given as part of the Gospel & Culture Lecture series featuring Jeff Van Duzer. Jeff Van Duzer is in his tenth year as the Dean of the School of Business and Economics at Seattle Pacific University. He is the author of Why Business Matters to God, and his areas of research include the ethics of wealth creation and distribution and the applied integration of business and theology.

N.T. Wright - After you Believe: Why Christian Character Matters

What does eschatology have to do with ethics? What does the new heaven and the new earth have to do with the world in which we live now? Ultimately, it means that love is not our duty but our destiny. Through God's grace in our lives, Christians strive to develop habits and character which build them up into the people that God originally created them to be. Christians are not called to merely pray a prayer and forget the rest. Instead, we are called to be a royal priesthood, bringing God's love and royal stewardship into the new world that God is creating.

This lecture was given as part of the Gospel & Culture Lecture series featuring Dr. N. T. Wright. A leading scholar in New Testament studies and the mission of the church (authoring over 40 books), Dr. Wright is a significant voice in bridging theology and practice. In this lecture he discusses his newest book, After You Believe, the third in a series following Simply Christian, and Surprised by Hope.

Tim Keller: Where Imagination & Innovation Meet

“Reason is the natural organ of truth; but imagination is the organ of meaning. Imagination, producing new metaphors or revivifying old, is not the cause of truth, but its condition.” - C.S. Lewis

If imagination is the organ of meaning, and if God orients our imagination, then the gospel offers a creative advantage when it comes to bringing meaning to our work. But what state must our imaginations be in to spark innovation? And what’s the best fuel to keep our imagination running? Tim Keller walks us through how the hope of the gospel is not only the source of our imagination, but the fuel and anchor we need to drive our imagination into innovative terrain.

Timothy Keller is the founding pastor of Redeemer Presbyterian Church in New York City and the author of such New York Times bestselling books as The Reason for God and The Prodigal God. He is also Chairman of Redeemer City to City, which has helped start over 250 churches in global cities worldwide. He lives in New York City with his wife Kathy.

(Workshop) Tim Keller: "Preaching to the Heart"

Tim Keller | Our Identity: The Christian Alternative to Late Modernity's Story (11/11/2015)

Real Security and the Call of God – Timothy Keller [Sermon]