Title: Harmony In the Home
Theme: "The beauty of having a Christian home with unity"
Author: Donald Cantrell
Text: Ephesians 6: 1-4
I - The Obedient Call (1)
II - The Optimal Command (2 - 3)
III - The Overbearing Charge (4)
This sermon contains a fully alliterated outline, with subpoints.
The Table That Brought Us Back
Years ago, an old man named Henry lived in a small town in the Midwest. He had built his family home with his own hands, board by board. But over the years, arguments, bitterness, and spiritual neglect had driven his family apart. One Christmas Eve, now alone in that old house, Henry decided to set the table as if the whole family were coming. He even lit candles for every child and grandchild, though none had come in years.
That night, one by one, they arrived, unexpected, unplanned. Each had felt a strange pull to come home. Tears fell, apologies were exchanged, and they sat at that table and prayed, for the first time in decades. That night, a broken family became a godly one. Unity was restored.
There's something sacred about a home that is centered on Christ. It becomes more than a place; it becomes a sanctuary.
The Great Cereal War of '03
There once was a family with three kids, ages 5, 8, and 10, and two very tired parents who just wanted a peaceful Saturday morning. But as any seasoned parent knows, peace in a house with children is like Bigfoot, some say it exists, but no one's ever seen it.
One Saturday, the dad stumbled into the kitchen to get coffee, only to find his three children in what could only be described as full-blown negotiations of a ceasefire, over cereal.
The 10-year-old wanted the healthy cereal because he had just read the nutrition label. The 8-year-old wanted chocolate puffs because he believed life should be enjoyed, not endured. The 5-year-old wanted whatever the 8-year-old didn't want, simply because that's how siblings work. Dad tried to mediate. "Let's just mix them all togeth ...
Theme: "The beauty of having a Christian home with unity"
Author: Donald Cantrell
Text: Ephesians 6: 1-4
I - The Obedient Call (1)
II - The Optimal Command (2 - 3)
III - The Overbearing Charge (4)
This sermon contains a fully alliterated outline, with subpoints.
The Table That Brought Us Back
Years ago, an old man named Henry lived in a small town in the Midwest. He had built his family home with his own hands, board by board. But over the years, arguments, bitterness, and spiritual neglect had driven his family apart. One Christmas Eve, now alone in that old house, Henry decided to set the table as if the whole family were coming. He even lit candles for every child and grandchild, though none had come in years.
That night, one by one, they arrived, unexpected, unplanned. Each had felt a strange pull to come home. Tears fell, apologies were exchanged, and they sat at that table and prayed, for the first time in decades. That night, a broken family became a godly one. Unity was restored.
There's something sacred about a home that is centered on Christ. It becomes more than a place; it becomes a sanctuary.
The Great Cereal War of '03
There once was a family with three kids, ages 5, 8, and 10, and two very tired parents who just wanted a peaceful Saturday morning. But as any seasoned parent knows, peace in a house with children is like Bigfoot, some say it exists, but no one's ever seen it.
One Saturday, the dad stumbled into the kitchen to get coffee, only to find his three children in what could only be described as full-blown negotiations of a ceasefire, over cereal.
The 10-year-old wanted the healthy cereal because he had just read the nutrition label. The 8-year-old wanted chocolate puffs because he believed life should be enjoyed, not endured. The 5-year-old wanted whatever the 8-year-old didn't want, simply because that's how siblings work. Dad tried to mediate. "Let's just mix them all togeth ...
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