Sermon Archive (Page 84)

Live Stream

Featured Sermons

Our Sunday morning worship hour is the highlight of our week. It’s when we come together to praise God for all He has done for us.

Click here to view the sermons presented on Sunday mornings.

It will give you a great taste of what to experience when you visit us at Hoover!

Podcast

We’ve made it easy to listen to our lessons on the go. You can follow our podcast on Apple iTunes, Google Play, Spotify, or search for Hoover Church of Christ in your favorite podcast app!

Follow on iTunes: https://apple.co/2SLP89v
Follow on Google Play: https://bit.ly/2JH5BaW
Follow on Spotify: https://spoti.fi/2JHXRWn

Complete Sermon Archive

Running the Race

The Christian life is difficult, at times–something we all can relate to. It involves sacrifices and sometimes persecutions, and occasionally we get discouraged. We might even want to quit. The writer of Hebrews compares it to a race, and I suspect he’s thinking of a long-distance run, not a sprint. When you’re running a marathon, for example, the adrenaline runs out in the first part of the race, and you have to tough it out in order to finish. The…

Jacob’s Ladder

Jesus Christ meets our most basic human needs. We need companionship (we don’t want to be alone), we crave security (we don’t want to feel vulnerable), and we want a home–somewhere to belong (we don’t want to be rootless). When God comes to Jacob, the patriarch is a fugitive who is alone and vulnerable. He’s been told by his parents to leave home–to leave the land of Canaan–and go about 450 miles to the northeast to find a wife. On…

It Cost Everything

This chapter is an odd and interesting conclusion to the book of Samuel. Chronologically, it almost certainly belongs to an earlier period in David’s life, so the author probably intended for it to be a kind of summary of David’s life. In a similar way to last week’s text (Psalm 51), David shows an attitude of remorse–probably the reason why God blessed him with a kingdom that would survive his death. But the focus here is on God, who does…

Have Mercy On Me, O God

Psalm 51 is one of the most famous of all the Psalms, perhaps because we’re drawn to the emotional rawness and vulnerability that it reflects. According to tradition, David wrote this psalm after Nathan had come to him and convicted him of the sins he had committed against Bathsheba and her husband, but especially against God. We’ll reflect Sunday morning on what this Psalm teaches us about the ugliness of sin and what it does to us. We’ll think about…