Get 30 FREE sermons.

WINNING THE WAR (6)

by Brian Mills

Scripture: James 4:1-17


Winning the War (6)
Series: James
Brian Mills
James 4:1-17

James....

ONLY 2 weeks left after this...

NOW - Reminder...

James is the ½ brother of JESUS
He is writing to Christians
It is the locker room talk
Coach James is calling all up.

How about the OKC Thurder.... I mean they stress us out in the first half... We start to believe 3rd Quarter then they show off in the 4th quarter.

I think they lead the league this year in 20-point comebacks.

They have had 48 comeback wins this year.

What do you think Coach Mark Daigneault is saying at halftime...

Guys, it is ok... you are young. Just keep working hard and maybe next year we could win!!!

NO - He is calling them up. Through his leadership, the young NBA players are unified and together. They believe they can win.

Coach is getting the most out of his players.

James wants to do that out of the Christians in the church.

Why do you think he said all this...


He said it all b/c they, JUST LIKE US, were struggling at times.

James 1:1-12 Turning Defeat into Victory

They struggled to stay faithful

James 1:13-18 Resist the Lure

They struggled w/ the temptation of SIN

James 1:19-27 LEVEL UP!!

They had fallen for Moral Filth

James 2:1-12 Be Better Be Humble

They were not humble and were speaking against others in the community

James 2:14-16 Prove it

Some were in the church and were not saved.

They were speaking like Christians, doing the things Christians do but had never committed their life to follow Christ.

James 3:1-12 Speak Life

They were fighting in the church.

They began dealing with the problem of quarreling and backbiting within the church.

TODAY James 4:1-17 Winning the War

In the 1st part, he sticks w/ this conversation on Quarrels in the church.

The immediate issue seems to have been people competing with one another for positions within the church

So they would tear each ot ...

There are 14664 characters in the full content. This excerpt only shows a 2000 character sample of the full content.

Price:  $5.99 or 1 credit
Start a Free Trial