JUDAS, THE TREACHEROUS TRAITOR (1 OF 5)
Title: "Judas, The Treacherous Traitor"
Theme: "Judas willingly walked away, turning his back on Jesus"
Text: "John 6: 71"
Donald Cantrell
Easter Series Sermon 1 of 5 "Five People In The Easter Story"
John 6:71 KJV - He spake of Judas Iscariot [the son] of Simon: for he it was that should betray him, being one of the twelve.
I - Judas & His Notorious Name
II - Judas & His Nefarious Nature
III - Judas & His Neglectful Narrative
IV - Judas & His Numbing Nomination
This sermon contains a fully alliterated outline, with subpoints.
Two Traitors
John Wilkes Booth was a diehard American. His sympathy was with the Southern cause. Slavery was only a side line to the many who opposed the Union in the years leading up to the Civil War.
The real issue was the rights of individual states to conduct their business under the umbrella of a national government. To many people in the early and mid-1800s, the feeling was that the Government in Washington D. C. was interfering way too much in the individual States' governments.
Lincoln ran on the platform that the Federal Government had the final right to decide what was best for the nation and all the state governments must comply with what the Federal position was at any time the United States' Congress and government acted. In effect, that position greatly curtailed the separate states to conduct its own affairs as each one saw fit too so due.
When the Southern states rose up and invoked the Constitution of their right to secede from the union and go their own way, the Civil War began in earnest. Many, like Booth, believed that Lincoln was wrong, that he was a despot, a dictator and that he was acting contrary to the Constitution. Booth saw one way out to save his beloved South and indeed the entire nation and that was to kill Mr. Lincoln.
Booth was popular, a good actor, smart, articulate and bold. When he finally reached his infamous decision, he felt that once he killed the Pres ...
Theme: "Judas willingly walked away, turning his back on Jesus"
Text: "John 6: 71"
Donald Cantrell
Easter Series Sermon 1 of 5 "Five People In The Easter Story"
John 6:71 KJV - He spake of Judas Iscariot [the son] of Simon: for he it was that should betray him, being one of the twelve.
I - Judas & His Notorious Name
II - Judas & His Nefarious Nature
III - Judas & His Neglectful Narrative
IV - Judas & His Numbing Nomination
This sermon contains a fully alliterated outline, with subpoints.
Two Traitors
John Wilkes Booth was a diehard American. His sympathy was with the Southern cause. Slavery was only a side line to the many who opposed the Union in the years leading up to the Civil War.
The real issue was the rights of individual states to conduct their business under the umbrella of a national government. To many people in the early and mid-1800s, the feeling was that the Government in Washington D. C. was interfering way too much in the individual States' governments.
Lincoln ran on the platform that the Federal Government had the final right to decide what was best for the nation and all the state governments must comply with what the Federal position was at any time the United States' Congress and government acted. In effect, that position greatly curtailed the separate states to conduct its own affairs as each one saw fit too so due.
When the Southern states rose up and invoked the Constitution of their right to secede from the union and go their own way, the Civil War began in earnest. Many, like Booth, believed that Lincoln was wrong, that he was a despot, a dictator and that he was acting contrary to the Constitution. Booth saw one way out to save his beloved South and indeed the entire nation and that was to kill Mr. Lincoln.
Booth was popular, a good actor, smart, articulate and bold. When he finally reached his infamous decision, he felt that once he killed the Pres ...
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