The Morning that Changed Everything
Have you heard the phrase “it was a game changer”? People say this when they want to emphasize how a person, idea, or event completely changed everything. Here are a few key people and events that changed everything: In 49 BC a defiant Julius Caesar crossed a small stream called the Rubicon which led to the end of the Roman Republic and the beginning of the Roman Empire. The Roman Empire would last for a thousand years! Sometime between 1440 and 1450 Johannes Gutenberg invented the printing press and the printing of books exploded and the information age was born. In 1928 Scottish scientist Alexander Fleming discovered penicillin and countless lives have been spared suffering and death ever since. No doubt these brilliant and influential people changed everything.
Who would you pick as the most influential man in human history? Would you pick a king like Caesar, an inventor like Guttenberg, a scientist Flemming, or…a poor traveling preacher? From a historical point of view even secular historians agree that the most influential person in human history is Jesus Christ. Twenty centuries have come and gone, and today he is the central figure of the human race.
How could a humble traveling preacher become the Savior of the world through weakness and self-sacrifice? It’s very hard to understand but the Gospel proclaims that Jesus Christ wasn’t just a prophet, preacher, or moral teacher, He was and is God come in the flesh.
Although He was without sin, He came to suffer and die as sinner on behalf of those who actually are sinners. His resurrection from the dead reveals that He is the way, the truth and the life.
Join us this Sunday from 10-11:15 for a message based on Luke 24:1-35 called, "Resurrection Sunday: The Morning That Changed Everything."
Who would you pick as the most influential man in human history? Would you pick a king like Caesar, an inventor like Guttenberg, a scientist Flemming, or…a poor traveling preacher? From a historical point of view even secular historians agree that the most influential person in human history is Jesus Christ. Twenty centuries have come and gone, and today he is the central figure of the human race.
How could a humble traveling preacher become the Savior of the world through weakness and self-sacrifice? It’s very hard to understand but the Gospel proclaims that Jesus Christ wasn’t just a prophet, preacher, or moral teacher, He was and is God come in the flesh.
Although He was without sin, He came to suffer and die as sinner on behalf of those who actually are sinners. His resurrection from the dead reveals that He is the way, the truth and the life.
Join us this Sunday from 10-11:15 for a message based on Luke 24:1-35 called, "Resurrection Sunday: The Morning That Changed Everything."