Navigating the Storms: Paul’s Shipwreck and the Anchor of Hope

This podcast episode delves into Acts chapter 27, wherein the Apostle Paul embarks on a perilous journey to Rome, ultimately experiencing a shipwreck. Pastor Josh Massaro articulates that amidst the tumultuous circumstances that beset Paul, the unwavering faith he embodies serves as a profound testament to the steadfastness of hope found in Jesus Christ. The narrative delineates not only the physical trials faced but also the spiritual anchors that sustain believers during life's tempests. Through a meticulous examination of Paul's experiences, we are reminded that true assurance lies not in the absence of hardship but in the presence of divine promise and purpose. Join us as we explore how Paul's journey exemplifies the importance of maintaining faith and composure when confronted with adversities.
Takeaways:
- In the midst of adversity, we can find solace and strength through unwavering faith in Jesus Christ.
- Paul's journey to Rome exemplifies the importance of obedience to God's will, even amidst trials and tribulations.
- The metaphor of a shipwreck serves as a reminder that life will present challenges, but our anchor must remain in Christ.
- True hope does not rely on external circumstances, but is founded firmly in the promises of God as revealed in Scripture.
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This podcast is produced by Ralph Estep, Jr., host of Financially Confident Christian, a daily podcast on Christian Finance you can find it at https://www.financiallyconfidentchristian.com
00:00 - Untitled
00:00 - Introduction to the Podcast
05:50 - Paul's Journey to Rome and the Shipwreck
11:18 - Building Our House on the Rock
17:03 - The Journey to Rome: Paul's Voyage and Wisdom
25:17 - Finding Hope Amidst Hopelessness
30:27 - Finding Hope in the Midst of Storms
39:23 - The Role of the Holy Spirit in the Church
46:15 - The Promise of God in the Storms of Life
Hello and welcome to the Middletown Baptist Church Podcast, where we are proclaiming the truth to the world.
Speaker AMy name is Pastor Josh, and I want to thank you for listening to this podcast.
Speaker AI hope that this podcast can be a blessing to you and strengthen you in the word of God.
Speaker ANow, come along.
Speaker ALet's look into the Bible and see what God has for us here today.
Speaker AAll right, well, we're going to go ahead and move forward with our sermon series here in the Book of Acts.
Speaker AAnd so if you have your Bibles, turn there with me to Acts chapter 27.
Speaker AThis is going to be our main text here for the evening.
Speaker AWe're going to jump around and look at a few other texts, but this is where we're going to start.
Speaker AActs, chapter 27.
Speaker AWhere are we at?
Speaker APaul has appealed to be sent to Caesar.
Speaker ASo he's appealed to Caesar.
Speaker AAnd at this point in time, Paul is being sent to Rome.
Speaker AAnd this is a culmination of the prophecy that God gave him all the way back in Acts chapter 9.
Speaker AActs, chapter 9.
Speaker AGod told him that he would preach the Gospel to the Jews, to the Gentiles there, all over the world, but specifically in Rome and to kings and leaders.
Speaker AAnd then we see later on that Paul has a desire to go to Rome.
Speaker AWe know that Paul had.
Speaker AHe was, as I said in the.
Speaker AIn the Bible here, it says that he was bound in the spirit to go to Jerusalem.
Speaker ASo he was facing persecution, but he was facing persecution and obedience.
Speaker ASome people tried to stop him from moving forward and going to Jerusalem, but nonetheless, he goes and he preaches the Gospel.
Speaker AHe's persecuted, put in prison for preaching the Gospel, ultimately held there for two years.
Speaker AHe actually got moved up to a place called Caesarea.
Speaker AHe was held in Caesarea for two years.
Speaker AUltimately, they didn't know what to do with him.
Speaker AThey really couldn't find him guilty of anything.
Speaker ABut the Jewish leaders did not want him out, so they just held him there.
Speaker ANo one really wanted to do the right thing.
Speaker ABut ultimately, Paul says, I want to appeal to Caesar.
Speaker AI want to appeal to the highest authority of the land.
Speaker AAnd so he does so right at the end of chapter 26, there was this guy named King Agrippa who basically says that if Paul did not appeal to Caesar, he would be set free.
Speaker ABut we know that Paul is making decisions in the will of God to do the things that God has him to do.
Speaker AAnd that means that Paul is going to face difficulties.
Speaker AWe know through other passages of scripture that Paul faced more than just bondage in prison.
Speaker AWe know that he faced persecution physically, spiritually, and we know that he was shipwrecked.
Speaker AAnd this is one of those passages of Scripture that speaks to one of the shipwrecks of Paul.
Speaker ASo keep your finger there in Acts, chapter 27.
Speaker AAnd I want you to see where he references this shipwreck in second Corinthians.
Speaker AAnd so, Second Corinthians, he references this shipwreck.
Speaker AAnd this was when we were studying the book of second Corinthians.
Speaker AThis was when Paul was recount, recounting all the difficulties that he had gone through.
Speaker AAnd remember, there were people there in the church of Corinth that said they were the true ministers of the Gospel and that Paul was a false teacher.
Speaker AAnd Paul was basically saying, have they gone through all these things for the cause of the Gospel?
Speaker AAnd he was going through the things that he has gone through.
Speaker AVerse 23 of Second Corinthians, chapter 11, he says, are they ministers of Christians?
Speaker AI speak as a fool.
Speaker AI am more in labors, more abundant, in stripes above measure.
Speaker AHe's saying he's been beaten so many times he can't even count.
Speaker AIn prisons more frequent.
Speaker AHe references many of his imprisonments there in deaths off of the Jews.
Speaker AFive times received I 40 stripes, save one.
Speaker AThrice I was beaten with rods, once I was stoned.
Speaker AThrice I suffered shipwreck.
Speaker AA night and a day I have been in the deep and journeyings often in perils of waters.
Speaker AWe're going to talk about perils of waters here in Acts, chapter 27.
Speaker AHe goes on to say, in perils of robbers and perils of mine own countrymen.
Speaker AThat's already what we've seen here in the book of Acts.
Speaker AHis own countrymen, the people that he loves, his own Jewish people, turn their backs against him and ultimately persecute him.
Speaker ASo he says, perils of mine own countrymen, and perils by the heathen, and perils in the city, and perils in the wilderness, and perils in the sea.
Speaker AIn perils among false brethrens, in weariness and painfulness, in watchings, often staying up late at night, not sleeping, in hunger and thirst and fastings, often in cold and nakedness.
Speaker ABut besides those things that are without, that which cometh upon me daily, the care of all the churches.
Speaker AAnd so he goes on to say that, hey, I've gone through all of these difficulties, but ultimately it's for the cause of the gospel.
Speaker AEarlier on, in the book of second Corinthians, he goes and talks about how he is pressed.
Speaker AHe's he's been troubled on every side.
Speaker AThat's chapter eight.
Speaker AExcuse me, Chapter four, verse eight.
Speaker AWe are troubled on every side, yet not distressed.
Speaker AWe are perplexed, but not in despair.
Speaker APersecuted, but not forsaken, Cast down, but not destroyed.
Speaker AAnd so Paul says, my hope in Jesus Christ is not found in my circumstances.
Speaker ABecause if anybody could blame his circumstances for being upset with God, it could be.
Speaker AIt would be Paul, right?
Speaker ASure.
Speaker AShipwreck, beaten, forgotten about, betrayed, thrown in prison, falsely accused.
Speaker ABut through all of this, we see Paul saying, hey, my purpose in the gospel is so much bigger than what people do to me.
Speaker AThe purpose of the gospel and the call of the gospel in his life was so much bigger than difficulties that he would face.
Speaker AAnd so he's following God in obedience and he's thrown in prison there in Jerusalem.
Speaker AHe's following God in obedience, and he's held in Caesarea for.
Speaker AFor really doing nothing wrong.
Speaker AHe's following God in obedience.
Speaker AAnd now he's going to be sent to Rome.
Speaker AHe's going to be sent to the capital of the world.
Speaker AHe's going to be sent to the belly of the beast.
Speaker AHe's going to be sent to evil there with King Nero.
Speaker ABut yet at the same time, there's going to be a lot more that happens in that journey.
Speaker AAnd so that's where we're going to be here in Acts, chapter 27.
Speaker ABut we know that even in the shipwreck physically, or what we would call the shipwrecks of life, the storms of life, we can have an anchor in Jesus Christ.
Speaker AAnd I want to take you to a passage of scripture that references that as well.
Speaker AThe book of Hebrews, Hebrews chapter six.
Speaker ADown at the end of the chapter, we can see that no matter what the case might be in our life, and for us, it's not necessarily going to be a physical shipwreck that's going to cause us issues.
Speaker AMost of us are going to not be on a boat in the middle of the sea with storms around us and calling out to God in that way.
Speaker ABut many of us are going through other shipwrecks in our life, other storms of our life that might not necessarily be physical storms.
Speaker AIt might be, but it might be spiritual storms.
Speaker AIt might be spiritual difficulties.
Speaker AAnd here in Hebrews chapter six, we see that we can find an anchor in the midst of the storm.
Speaker AMy dad and I like to fish, and we like to go out fishing.
Speaker AWhen, when I'm there in Florida, we go out on this boat and he doesn't Have a really big boat.
Speaker ABut we have been in some decent storms, nothing crazy, or our little boat would be tipped over and gone.
Speaker ABut one of the things that we do is we try to get to a spot where we can catch some fish.
Speaker AAnd that happens from time to time.
Speaker AAnd we know that there's going to be fish there.
Speaker AAnd so what do we do?
Speaker AWe don't just drift by.
Speaker AWe throw our anchor out and we try to get that anchor to stick so that we can hold in one spot, so that we can accomplish what we're trying to do by catching fish.
Speaker ABut sometimes what will happen is, is that we'll throw that anchor out, but the storm or the wind is blowing so strongly that that anchor will pull up or.
Speaker AOr the anchor line will break or we won't get a good set into the ground.
Speaker AAnd so when that happens, we're not steady.
Speaker AWe're not.
Speaker AAnd we're like.
Speaker AAll of a sudden, my dad's like, are we moving?
Speaker AI think.
Speaker AI think we're moving.
Speaker AOkay.
Speaker AThat anchor didn't hold fast.
Speaker AAnd so what we can see here is that there's a lot of things in our life that we can throw out into the water to hold us there in the midst of the storm.
Speaker ABut anything outside of what we're going to see is the true anchor in Jesus Christ is eventually going to fail.
Speaker AAs the storms of life begin to blow, as.
Speaker AAs the winds blow, as the.
Speaker AAs the seas are tossed to and fro, that many things that we think are anchor in life will come up.
Speaker AIf we're trusting in anything outside of Jesus Christ, it will, at some point, under immense pressure, fail us.
Speaker ABut what we're going to see in Hebrews, chapter six, verse 19, is that our hope is found alone in Jesus Christ says in verse 19, which hope we have as an anchor of the soul.
Speaker ASo it's not a physical anchor, but it's an anchor of the soul.
Speaker AIt's what holds us steady in the midst of the storm.
Speaker AAnd so we're about to go through a whole study with Paul going and being shipwrecked.
Speaker AAnd then some of you know the rest of the story.
Speaker AHe goes on to land, and he finds himself in a lot of other struggles as he's on land.
Speaker AAnd so how could Paul trust in the Lord?
Speaker AHow could he push forward in obedience?
Speaker ASometimes, at least for me, I look at Paul and I say, man, this guy is a superhero.
Speaker AHow could this guy be real Difficulty after difficulty, he pushes forward for the cause of the gospel.
Speaker AHow could he do this Most of us, if we're honest with ourselves, would have quit a long, long time ago.
Speaker ABut the truth is, is that Paul had an anchor.
Speaker AAnd Hebrews chapter six tells us what that anchor was.
Speaker AIt says, which hope we have as an anchor of the soul, both sure and steadfast.
Speaker ASo there's only one anchor of the soul that's sure and steadfast and which entereth into that within the veil whither the forerunner is for us entered.
Speaker AEven Jesus made a high priest forever after the Order of Melchizedek.
Speaker ANow, we're not going to get down the Order of Melchizedek here this evening.
Speaker AThat is a whole other study for another day.
Speaker ABut essentially what it's saying here is that we have a high priest in Jesus Christ who, who offered us the sacrifice, who connects God to man.
Speaker AWe know that Jesus says, I am the way, the truth and the life.
Speaker ANo man cometh unto the Father but by me.
Speaker ASo the role of the priest in the Old Testament was to connect God and man.
Speaker AWe know that is done through Jesus Christ and his sacrifice and our faith in him.
Speaker ASo when we're studying Paul, I think it's very easy for us just to look at Paul and say, you know what?
Speaker AThat's Paul.
Speaker ABut that can't be me.
Speaker AWhen I go through difficulties, I'm just going to give in.
Speaker ABecause, you know, the truth is I'm not strong like Paul.
Speaker ABut I'm going to tell you here tonight, even though Paul was gifted by God, even though God had a call for Paul's life, a specific call for Paul's life, Paul was just a man like everyone else here.
Speaker AHe was just a human being led by the Holy Spirit, called by God and trusting in God.
Speaker AAnd so what we can see is that he set his anchor in Jesus Christ.
Speaker ASo when he finds himself in this storm, when he finds himself shipwrecked, he doesn't question God because that's sometimes what our humanity wants us to do.
Speaker AAnd what we do is we say, well, if God loved me, he wouldn't let me go through the storm.
Speaker AIf God loved me and cared for me and wanted me to go preach in Rome, why would he shipwreck me?
Speaker AAnd the truth is that many of the struggles that we are going to face in our life are through our own bad decisions.
Speaker ABut there's going to be some shipwrecks that we go through.
Speaker AWhat we're going to see here with Paul, it wasn't his choice.
Speaker AActually.
Speaker APaul wanted to tell them, hey, don't go.
Speaker AWe shouldn't go.
Speaker ABut some shipwrecks and some storms in our life are beyond our control.
Speaker AAnd so God allows those to happen in her life.
Speaker AAnd the test of faith is not, hey, am I strong?
Speaker AIt's, hey, where is my foundation set?
Speaker AI want to take you to one last passage of scripture, and then I want us to go through the story with this context in our mind, and that is found in Luke, chapter six.
Speaker ALuke, chapter six.
Speaker AWe're gonna see here a story that many of you familiar with.
Speaker AI, I know that you know this as a parable, and that is the parable of the people that build their house upon the rock.
Speaker AAnd, and so I. I know that many of us have heard this story, and sometimes we just gloss over.
Speaker AThere's a song, the wise men build his house upon the rock.
Speaker ABut we're going to talk about what that means for us and how we can ultimately understand how we can build our house upon the rock of Jesus Christ.
Speaker ASo Luke chapter 6, verse 46.
Speaker AJesus is.
Speaker AIs teaching here something very interesting, and I think that it's something that we need to hear in our culture today.
Speaker ASays in verse 46 of Luke 6, and why call ye me Lord, Lord, and do not the things which I say?
Speaker ASo he says, there.
Speaker AThere are these people that are calling God Lord, or calling Him.
Speaker AThe word Lord means master.
Speaker ACalling him master with what they say, but it says, and do not the things which I say.
Speaker ASo you can't say God is controlling your life.
Speaker AYou can't say you're trusting in the Lord.
Speaker AYou can't say that he's your master.
Speaker AIf you don't obey him, you don't do the things which he says.
Speaker AVerse 47.
Speaker AWhoso cometh to me and heareth my sayings and doeth them, I will show you to whom he is like.
Speaker ASo it's not just about being a hearer, because it's one thing to hear the word of God.
Speaker AIt's one thing to know what God wants for us in our life.
Speaker ABut what Jesus says here, it's another thing to act upon that.
Speaker AIt's another thing to obey.
Speaker AIt's another thing to apply the principles that God is laying out for us.
Speaker ASo hearing it is not enough.
Speaker AI. I can tell you I have sat through many, many sermons throughout my life.
Speaker ASermons that I have given and sermons that I have heard.
Speaker AAnd, and they're.
Speaker AI can tell you in shame, there's a lot of sermons that I've sat through that they've gone in one ear and out the other.
Speaker AI'VE heard it, I understood it.
Speaker ABut really, as I walked out the door, that's where it stopped.
Speaker AIt just stopped right there.
Speaker AAnd what he says is this.
Speaker AThe danger sometimes is thinking that hearing is enough.
Speaker AYou know, I'll trust in God when the storms of life come.
Speaker ABut I'm okay right now.
Speaker ANo, it's the preparation of the storms to come.
Speaker AAnd he gives a parable.
Speaker AHe gives a story.
Speaker AHe gives a earthly story with a heavenly meaning here, starting in verse 48, he says, he is like a man which built an house and dig deep.
Speaker ASo the wise man, the one who is obeying the word of God, is like someone who builds a house.
Speaker AAnd he says, and dig deep.
Speaker AAnd I like the Luke passage here because it speaks of how he was digging deep into the foundation.
Speaker AReally, what I used to think of the story was there was this big rock and then there was this beach over here.
Speaker AThe one guy built his house upon this huge mountain.
Speaker AThe other guy built his house upon the beach.
Speaker ABut what we can see here is that he was actually digging down past the sand, past the dirt, down to the foundation stone.
Speaker ASays he digged deep and laid the foundation on a rock.
Speaker AAnd when the flood arose, the stream beat vehemently upon the house and could not shake it, for it was founded upon a rock.
Speaker AHe says, the one who is trusting in the Word of God has a sure foundation.
Speaker AAnd so when the storms of life come, when the shipwreck comes, when the confusion comes, we're able to say, you know what I am.
Speaker AI have my foundation set in something stronger than this storm.
Speaker ASo everything's okay for the one who builds his house upon the sure foundation, the rock, the Word of God.
Speaker AVerse 49.
Speaker ABut he that heareth and doeth not is like a man that without a foundation, built a house upon the earth.
Speaker ASo he.
Speaker AHe doesn't go deeper.
Speaker AHe doesn't apply wisdom.
Speaker AHe goes the easy route.
Speaker AHe says, you know what?
Speaker AI'll deal with that stuff later.
Speaker AI'll trust in God when the storms come.
Speaker ABut the Bible says in Psalm 1, if we want to be like a tree planted by the rivers of water, we have to be people who are desiring the things of God and putting our faith in the Word of God.
Speaker ASo he that heareth and doeth not is like a man without a foundation built and house upon the earth against which the stream did beat vehemently and immediately it fell.
Speaker AAnd the ruin of that house was great.
Speaker ASo the test was not necessarily, did the house look good?
Speaker AWe don't see Any difference in the appearance of these houses from the outside?
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AThe only difference was the foundation that they were built on.
Speaker AAnd we really don't see a problem with the house that was built upon the sands until the storms of life came.
Speaker ASo the storms of life, the difficulties of life, the shipwreck that Paul is going to face, that is the test on basically seeing what the believer is putting his or her faith in.
Speaker AAre we putting our faith in our circumstance?
Speaker AAre we putting our faith in the word of God and obeying the word of God and applying the word of God?
Speaker AAnd so, folks, we can't wait till the storm comes and then say, you know what?
Speaker ANow I need to learn how to trust God.
Speaker AThe Bible says is be prepared, build our house upon the rock.
Speaker AUnderstand that the storms of life will come, the struggles will come when God calls us to do something.
Speaker AAnd so we're going to go and we're going to look here at Acts chapter 27.
Speaker AA lot of this is essentially just explaining what happens in the life of Paul.
Speaker ABut I wanted to give you that long Runway so that you understand how Paul could go through all of these things and yet keep his eyes fixed on the goal of the Gospel and on the goodness of God in the midst of these trials.
Speaker ASo let's look at Acts, chapter 27.
Speaker ARemember, Paul is heading to Rome, and it's not like he could just jump on a plane and be there in a few hours.
Speaker AThis is going to be a long journey.
Speaker AVerse 1.
Speaker AAnd when it was determined that we should sail into Italy, they delivered Paul and certain other prisoners unto one named Julius, a centurion of Augustus's band.
Speaker AAnd so lest we think that Paul is riding on a cruise line, by the way, you know, I. I think that sometimes in my mind I think of things in modern fashions.
Speaker ABut Paul is riding basically on a prisoner's ship.
Speaker AIt wasn't going to be the greatest accommodations necessarily.
Speaker AAnd he's still being treated as a prisoner, though we see Paul's testimony allows him to have some beneficial treatment from the leaders there.
Speaker AAnd so let's look here at verse number two.
Speaker AAnd it says in entering into the ship Adramytium, we launched.
Speaker AAnd it says we there because obviously Luke, the writer of Acts, is there with him.
Speaker AWe launched meaning to sail by the coast of Asia, One Aristarchus, a Macedonian of Thessalonica, being with us.
Speaker AAnd so he's going through basically some of the main characters that are there with them on this ship ride, Verse three.
Speaker AAnd the next day we touch down a sidon.
Speaker AAnd Julius's courteously entreated Paul and gave him liberty to go unto his friends to refresh himself.
Speaker ASo this is kind of unique because of Paul's testimony.
Speaker AThis guy named Julius allows Paul, because of his kindness to go visit some friends there and so that he can be renewed and refreshed.
Speaker AAnd so I, I think that we can sometimes in Scripture over spiritualize things and over allegorize things.
Speaker ABut what I will say that I think we can learn from this is that while we are trusting in the Lord and while we're going through difficulties, God does allow for times of refreshment and renewal if we're open to follow him.
Speaker AI think a lot of times we think that it's all dark and it's all gloomy when we're going through the trials of life.
Speaker ABut what we see here throughout Paul's life, there's great times of joy and refreshment in the Lord.
Speaker ASo it says there in, in that passage that he was refreshed in verse three, verse four.
Speaker AAnd when we had launched from fence, we sailed under Cyprus because the winds were contrary.
Speaker ASo obviously the path was changed a little bit because of the winds being contrary to what they had planned there.
Speaker AVerse 5.
Speaker AAnd when we had sailed over the sea of Sicilicia and, and Pamphylia, we came to Myra, a city of lyia, and there the centurion found a ship of Alexandria sailing into Italy.
Speaker ASo they're going to change ships and he put us therein.
Speaker AAnd when we had sailed slowly many days and Scarus were come over against Snidus, the wind not suffering us or not allowing us, we sailed under creep over against Salome, and hardly passing it came unto a place which is called the Fair Havens.
Speaker ANigh unto was the city of Lassie Laia.
Speaker AAnd so we're, we're getting a lot of geography and for the sake of time I'm not going to be able to go through all of this.
Speaker ABut obviously you can reference a, a map and you can point out these different places, but they're, they're sailing and obviously they're making passage through these different areas.
Speaker AVerse 9.
Speaker ANow, when much time was spent and when sailing was now dangerous because the fast was now already passed, Paul admonished them and said unto them, sirs, I perceive that this voyage will be with hurt and much damage, not only of the lading and ship, but also our lives.
Speaker AAnd so Paul gives advice to the captain and the crew and he says, hey look, this is going to Be dangerous.
Speaker AThis is a dangerous season.
Speaker ASo Paul shows that he has some experience with sailing.
Speaker AHe has some experience navigating on the waters.
Speaker AAnd so Paul, he speaks here and he says, hey, look, I've got some wisdom.
Speaker AI don't necessarily know if this is a prophecy of God that he says, hey, we are going to wreck.
Speaker AIt might just be that Paul has some wisdom on the seas and knows that this is going to be a difficult time to sail.
Speaker AAnd so he knows the seasons, he knows the conditions.
Speaker AMaybe it was God speaking to him.
Speaker ABut Paul advises them, hey, don't.
Speaker ALet's not go.
Speaker AThis is not good.
Speaker AAnd so we can see that even here.
Speaker AThere are going to be times in our life that we are showing discernment, we are showing wisdom.
Speaker AWe are doing by all intents and purposes the right thing, but the surroundings around us are out of our control.
Speaker AAnd so what he says is, hey, we shouldn't go any further.
Speaker ABut he says, it's not just going to hurt our ship, it could take our lives.
Speaker ASo verse 11.
Speaker ANevertheless, the Centurion believed the master and the owner of the ship, they don't trust Paul, they don't trust his wisdom.
Speaker AThey trust the captain more than those things which were spoken by Paul.
Speaker AAnd because the haven was not commodious to winter in the more part advised to depart thence also, if by any means they might obtain Zophinus, and there to winter, which is a haven of Crete, and lieth toward the southwest and northwest.
Speaker AAnd so the decision is made to sail on.
Speaker AAnd so we know that they are moving forward, and we know the end of the story.
Speaker AThey don't know the end of the story, but they were advised not to move forward.
Speaker AAnd they.
Speaker AThey failed to listen.
Speaker AThey.
Speaker AThey failed to take in the wise words of Paul.
Speaker AAnd ultimately we know that they should have listened to Paul later on in the passage.
Speaker AWe're going to see that they understand that.
Speaker ASo let's look at verse number 13.
Speaker AAnd when the south wind blew softly, supposing that they had obtained their purpose, when losing thence, they sailed close by Crete.
Speaker ABut not long after there arose again a tempestuous wind called Euroclydon.
Speaker AAnd when the ship was caught and could not bear up into the wind, we let her drive at running under a certain island which is called Cla.
Speaker AWe had much work to come by the boat, which when they had taken up, they used helps undergirding the ship, and fearing lest they should fall into the quicksands, straight sail and.
Speaker AAnd we're so driven and we being exceedingly tossed with the tempest.
Speaker AThe next day they lighten the ship.
Speaker ASo we essentially see that they're taking all the precautions, trying to take all the measures to get through this storm.
Speaker AAnd so the winds, they looked favorable, so they moved out.
Speaker AThis other wind came in, started this storm.
Speaker AAnd sometimes that's what happens sometimes in life.
Speaker AI would say that everything's looking okay.
Speaker AWe think that everything's smooth.
Speaker AAnd out of what we would say, out of nowhere, the storms of life can come.
Speaker AAnd so they're trying to take measures to save the ship.
Speaker AVerses 17 through 19.
Speaker AAnd they said that they're being exceedingly tossed.
Speaker AVerse 18.
Speaker AThe next day they lighten the ship.
Speaker AAnd the third day we cast out with our own hands the tackling of the ship.
Speaker AAnd so all the way through, we see that they're doing everything they possibly can in their own wisdom and their own strength to save themselves.
Speaker ABut we know that in our own life that we are limited and we cannot save ourselves.
Speaker AIn this case, they bring themselves to hopelessness.
Speaker ASo I. I think this is a great picture of people trying to save themselves.
Speaker AAnd what does trying to save ourselves amount to?
Speaker AVerse 20.
Speaker AAnd when neither sun nor stars and many days appeared and no small tempest lay on us, all hope that we should be saved was taken then away.
Speaker AAnd so we see in verse number 20 that hopelessness sets in.
Speaker AAnd so on.
Speaker AOn the open sea, they couldn't navigate because they couldn't see the sun or.
Speaker AOr the stars.
Speaker AAnd.
Speaker AAnd so they were at a place of hopelessness.
Speaker AIn verse number 37, we see that there was 276 people on the boat between the passengers and the crew.
Speaker AAnd it seems like at this point is when they finally give up, they lose hope, and that's a bad place to be.
Speaker AWe mentioned it this morning, and I think a lot of people struggle in their lives when they lose hope.
Speaker AAnd people lose hope for a lot of different reasons.
Speaker AIt could be circumstances, it could be there's no lights in the end of the tunnel for them, so to speak.
Speaker AMaybe plans have gone awry.
Speaker ABut what we can see in verse number 21 is that though Paul could have been like them in hopelessness, we know that his anchor is in something else.
Speaker AWe know that his anchor of the soul is found in Jesus Christ.
Speaker AAnd so Paul could have jumped right in with them.
Speaker AAnd sometimes we know that if there's 276 people complaining, misery loves company.
Speaker AAnd sometimes that can rub off on people.
Speaker AIf everybody is upset, if everybody is hopeless, we tend to lean towards being that way as well.
Speaker ABut Paul does not allow himself to fall into that trap of hopelessness.
Speaker AWhat does Paul do?
Speaker AHe tries to encourage them.
Speaker AVerse 21.
Speaker ABut after long abstinence, Paul stood forth in the midst of them and said, sirs, ye should have hearkened unto me.
Speaker ANow, whether or not that's the wisest thing to say in the mid.
Speaker ABut basically what he's saying is this, Guys, I told you so.
Speaker AYou should have listened to me.
Speaker ASometimes we're tempted to say that, um, and he's right, they should have listened to him.
Speaker ASir, you should have hearkened unto me and not have loose from Crete and to have gained this harm and loss.
Speaker AI'm sure that didn't necessarily go over well, that he told them that they had made the wrong decision.
Speaker AVerse 22 and now I exhort you to be of good cheer.
Speaker AThis is what it looks like for someone to have hope in the midst of people with hopelessness, right?
Speaker ASo if you're around a bunch of people and they have hopelessness and you walk in there and you go, hey, guys, be of good cheer.
Speaker AThey're going to say, what?
Speaker AWhy do you have hope?
Speaker AWell, because Paul's hope is not found in good seas.
Speaker APaul's hope is not found in his life.
Speaker APaul's hope is found in Jesus Christ.
Speaker AAnd so I think this is an awesome picture of how we can exhort others to comfort and joy and hope in the midst of difficulties.
Speaker ASo what does he do here?
Speaker APaul says, hey, I exhort you to be of good cheer, for there shall be no loss of any man's life among you, but of the ship.
Speaker ASo Paul says, guys, we can be happy here because none of you are going to die.
Speaker AAnd that's interesting.
Speaker AThat's an interesting concept for him to tell them.
Speaker AAnd so this was.
Speaker AEven though it's good news, it is a mixed message.
Speaker AThe promise that no one would die was.
Speaker AWas a hard to believe for them probably, but it was actually bad news that the ship would be lost because that essentially means they're going to be shipwrecked and then they didn't have the coast Guard to come pick them up.
Speaker AAnd so there's hopelessness with that, there's financial loss with that, there's cargo that would be lost with that.
Speaker AAnd so Paul basically says, hey, be happy when this bad thing happens.
Speaker AEven though he says your life's going to be saved, there's another negative with that.
Speaker AAnd that would be that the ship is going to wreck and that they're going to go through that difficulty.
Speaker ASo.
Speaker ASo again, how could Paul say this?
Speaker APaul says this because again, he knows that God has a promise in his life that God is going to preserve him, that God is going to sustain him.
Speaker AVerse number 23.
Speaker AAnd then he.
Speaker AHe gives where the hope is found.
Speaker AAnd the hope is found in the word of God.
Speaker AThe hope is found in the comfort of God.
Speaker AHe says in verse 23, for there stood by me this night the angel of God whose I am.
Speaker AHe says, I. I am of God.
Speaker AGod is with me.
Speaker AAnd God spoke to me.
Speaker AAnd essentially what he says here is that, hey, this is what God told me of whom I serve.
Speaker AAnd so what is Paul doing here?
Speaker APaul, again, it's so hard to understand how Paul can do this.
Speaker ABut in the midst of the storm, in the midst of being a prisoner, he's preaching the gospel, he's preaching hope, he's preaching the truth.
Speaker AVerse 24, saying, Fear not, Paul, thou must be brought before Caesar.
Speaker AAnd lo, God hath given thee all them that sail with thee.
Speaker ASo the reason why Paul can have this type of confidence is because of the promises of God, because of the specific promise of God.
Speaker AGive it to him this very night.
Speaker AAnd he says, hey, guys, God has promised me that we're going to get to the other side, though it's not going to be easy.
Speaker AThe storm going to take the ship.
Speaker AWe're going to be shipwrecked.
Speaker AHe doesn't give all the details of what's going to happen, but he says, hey, we're going to be okay.
Speaker AThis is similar to the story that Jesus.
Speaker AWhen Jesus tells the disciples, hey, we're going to get to the other side.
Speaker AThe storm comes and they start to question.
Speaker AAnd the presence of God in the midst of the ship with them was not enough because they thought Jesus should be saving them from all the storm.
Speaker ABut at the time, we know that Jesus was resting.
Speaker AJesus comes on the scene and says, you know what?
Speaker APeace be still.
Speaker AAnd everything was still.
Speaker AAnd so he says, we're going to get to the other side.
Speaker AEverything's going to be okay.
Speaker AHe says, don't fear.
Speaker AWhy God hath given thee all them that sail with thee.
Speaker AVerse 25.
Speaker AWherefore, sirs, be of good cheer, for I believe God.
Speaker AI mean, you could summarize Paul's testimony that way.
Speaker ABe of good cheer.
Speaker AI believe what God says.
Speaker AWhat if we.
Speaker AWhat if we as Christians could live that way around people that are hopeless?
Speaker AI mean, we live in a world of hopelessness.
Speaker AEven though there might be temporary Hope for people.
Speaker AThere are people that their hope is driven by what the news is saying.
Speaker ALiterally, if the news tells them everything's okay, they're like, okay, I can have hope today.
Speaker AWhat if the news says, guys, everything's hopeless, everything's bad.
Speaker AThey're hopeless and bad.
Speaker ABut what we can say is this, as Christians, we should be able to say the same testimony.
Speaker ABe of good cheer, for I believe God.
Speaker AI believe what God says.
Speaker AI believe that God loves us.
Speaker AI believe that God is the same yesterday, today, and forever.
Speaker AI believe that he's not going to leave me nor forsake me.
Speaker AI believe he's promised me something better than this world.
Speaker AAnd so even in the midst of a storm, even in the midst of a shipwreck, we can say, be of good cheer, because I believe God that it shall be even as it was told me how be it.
Speaker AWe must be cast upon a certain island.
Speaker ASo he says, it's not going to be easy.
Speaker AWe're going to be cast upon an island.
Speaker AWe're going to go through difficulties, but God is going to sustain us.
Speaker AAnd so Paul tells the crew of the Word of God.
Speaker AWhere do we get our Word of God?
Speaker AI don't get the word of God from a vision.
Speaker AI get the word of God from what we call the Bible, the Word of God.
Speaker AAnd so what do we trust in when things go awry in our life?
Speaker AWe trust in what he says in His Word.
Speaker AWe don't trust in what we're seeing necessarily in our.
Speaker AIn our world today.
Speaker AWe don't trust in the circumstances.
Speaker AAnd so Paul says the same thing that, that we see throughout the Old Testament and the New.
Speaker AI. I thought of Job, chapter 13, verse 15.
Speaker AJob says, though he slay me, yet will I trust him.
Speaker ABut I will maintain mine own ways before him.
Speaker AThough he slay me, I will trust him.
Speaker AThat's contrary to what our human minds really want to hear.
Speaker AWe want to hear, lord, I'll trust you.
Speaker AWhen everything's going my way, I'll trust you.
Speaker AWhen the storms of life are gone, I'll trust you.
Speaker ABut no, go back.
Speaker AThe anchor of my soul is Jesus Christ.
Speaker ASo I have to trust him.
Speaker AI have to believe that he is good.
Speaker AAnd so verse number 27 tells us that there is the shipwreck.
Speaker AThe shipwreck comes to pass.
Speaker AAnd so there is a difficulty here.
Speaker AI mean, the story could be that all the storm was calm and there wasn't a shipwreck.
Speaker ABut sometimes in life there is that shipwreck.
Speaker ASometimes that boat is going to break.
Speaker ASometimes the water is going to come in.
Speaker ASometimes we're going to have to be displaced.
Speaker ASometimes there's a detour, sometimes there's a roadblock.
Speaker ASometimes the plans that we had are changed.
Speaker ABut what do we do?
Speaker AWe continue to trust.
Speaker AVerse 27.
Speaker ABut when the fourteenth night was come, as we were driven up and down in Adria about midnight, the shipment deemed that they drew near to some country and sounded and found it 20 fathoms.
Speaker AAnd when they had gone a little further, they.
Speaker AThey sounded again and found it 15 fathoms.
Speaker AThen, fearing lest we should have fallen upon the rocks, they cast four anchors out of the stern and wish for the day.
Speaker ANow those anchors might fail.
Speaker AWe know the anchor of Jesus Christ will never fail going further here, verse number 30.
Speaker AAnd as the shipmen were about to flee out of the ship, and when they let down the bow into the sea under color, as though they would have cast anchors out of the four ship, Paul said to the centurion and to the soldiers, except these abide in the ship, you cannot be saved.
Speaker AAgain, there's a lot of analogy that we could talk about here.
Speaker AYou know, obviously this.
Speaker AThe sailors had to seek to escape the ship to be saved.
Speaker AThat they stayed on the ship.
Speaker AThey're.
Speaker AThey're gonna.
Speaker AThey're gonna die.
Speaker AAnd that some people have allegorized the fact that we have to have faith.
Speaker AWe have to take.
Speaker ATake that step of faith.
Speaker ABut nonetheless, obviously Paul says they've.
Speaker AThey've got to come.
Speaker AVerse 32.
Speaker AThen the soldiers cut off the ropes of the boat and let her fall off.
Speaker AAnd while the day was coming on, Paul besought them all to take meat, saying, this day is the 14th day, and ye have tarried and continue fasting, having taken nothing.
Speaker AWherefore I pray you to take some meat, for this is your health, for there shall not an hair fall from the head of you.
Speaker ASo he has this confidence that God is going to keep his word.
Speaker AAnd so this is how we can have that peace in the midst of chaos.
Speaker AVerse 35.
Speaker AAnd when he has thus spoken, he took bread and gave thanks to God in presence of all of them.
Speaker AWhen he had broken and he began to eat.
Speaker ASo we see Paul is ministering to these people.
Speaker AAnd remember, he's the prisoner.
Speaker ARemember he's the one that he could say, man, all these people, I hope they die.
Speaker AOkay, these people are not being kind to me.
Speaker ABut yet he's ministering to them.
Speaker AWhat an amazing thing that is.
Speaker AVerse 36.
Speaker AThen were all they, all of Good shear.
Speaker AAnd they also took some meat.
Speaker ASo he's impacting those around them.
Speaker AAnd we were in all the ship 203 score and 16 souls.
Speaker AAnd when they had eaten enough, they lightened the ship and cast out the wheat into the sea.
Speaker AAnd when it was day, they knew not the land, but they discovered a certain creek with a shore into, into the which they were minded, if they were possible to thrust in the ship.
Speaker AAnd when they had taken up the anchors, they committed themselves unto the sea and loosed the rudder bands and hoisted up the mainsail to the wind and, and made toward shore.
Speaker AAnd falling into a place where two seas met, they ran the ship aground.
Speaker AAnd the four part stuck fast and remained unmovable.
Speaker ABut the hinder parts was broken with violence of the waves.
Speaker AAnd the soldiers counsel was to kill the prisoners.
Speaker AWait, after all that they're going to kill the prisoners, lest any of them should swim out and escape.
Speaker ANow we know why they did that.
Speaker ABecause if the prisoners escaped, they died.
Speaker ABut the centurion willing to save Paul kept them from their purpose and commanded them that they should, that they could swim, should cast themselves and first into the sea and get to land.
Speaker AAnd the rest, some on boards and some of the broken pieces of the ship.
Speaker AAnd so it came to pass that they escaped all save the land.
Speaker AVerse 44 is the culmination of God's protection.
Speaker AThere God kept his word as he always does, and they would be saved.
Speaker AAnd so God gave Paul favor and grace in the eyes of the Roman centurion.
Speaker AHe could have just killed all the prisoners, but he didn't.
Speaker AAnd obviously we know that this was done because of the fact that God has a plan and a purpose for Paul.
Speaker AAnd so God's word, as we could say, never fails.
Speaker AAnd that's, that's really the shipwreck that, that we see now.
Speaker AI, I wish I could tell you that, you know, after that everything went okay, but Paul is going to face more struggles when he finds himself on land.
Speaker AAnd, and even when he gets to Rome, he, he doesn't have smooth sailing pretty much for the rest of Paul's life.
Speaker ACircumstances are not going to be what we would call ideal when it comes to our way of thinking.
Speaker ABut Paul would have told you, I think by way of his testimony that things were ideal because he was getting to minister the gospel.
Speaker AOkay, if that meant shipwreck, great.
Speaker AIf that meant being in prison, great.
Speaker AIf that meant persecution, fine.
Speaker AI will do it for the cause of the gospel.
Speaker AAnd so that's, that's the Difficulty.
Speaker AI think that sometimes in our life our focus is so much on ourself that we forget that it's really God's plan for us to further his purpose, to further his.
Speaker AHis plans, his word, his cause.
Speaker AAnd so Paul says, you know what?
Speaker AI'm okay.
Speaker AI can be of good cheer.
Speaker AWhy?
Speaker ABecause God's got me going to Rome now.
Speaker ARemember what's waiting for him in Rome?
Speaker AHe knows there's, there's a guy named Nero.
Speaker AThere's, there's people that are opposed to him.
Speaker ABut why, why does he want to go to Rome?
Speaker AHe wants to go to Rome.
Speaker AOne, because he wants to minister to the people there in Rome.
Speaker ABut, but number two, he, he wants to ultimately proclaim the gospel to everyone that he can.
Speaker AAnd so the word of God was true.
Speaker APaul kept the faith.
Speaker APaul kept his confidence, his anchor of his soul in Jesus Christ.
Speaker AAnd so next week we will come back and we will look at Acts, chapter 28.
Speaker AAnd I don't know if we'll go through the whole chapter next week.
Speaker AWe'll see how that goes.
Speaker ABut nonetheless, we will get close here to the end of the Book of Acts.
Speaker AAnd really the whole study of the Book of Acts, it started with this idea of what is the church?
Speaker AWhat is the church supposed to do?
Speaker AHow are we supposed to function?
Speaker AThe acronym we used, Acts.
Speaker AAuthentic Church through Scripture.
Speaker AWhat's the church all about?
Speaker AWell, it's not about entertainment.
Speaker AWe never saw that in the Book of Acts though.
Speaker AThe church in Acts didn't have it all put together.
Speaker ABy the way, it's not the perfect church because there were still flaws, there was still sin, there was still brokenness, there was still division.
Speaker ABut if you go back, I want to show you guys one thing we have to the end of the hour.
Speaker AAs I was reading through the Book of Acts again multiple times, there was something that I found so unique in chapter two.
Speaker AGo, go back to chapter two with me.
Speaker AWhat, what, what launched all of these things happening?
Speaker ABecause by the way, in the midst of the church is the Spirit of God, the Holy Spirit.
Speaker ARight?
Speaker AWe, we can't have the church without the Holy Spirit.
Speaker AWhy?
Speaker ABecause the Holy Spirit is the seal of the believer.
Speaker AYou can't have a church without believers.
Speaker AA church is not a fellowship of just random people.
Speaker AA church is made up of born again believers indwelled by the Spirit.
Speaker AThere are people that call themselves church, but if they don't have the spirit of God living within them, they're not the church.
Speaker AThis building is not the church.
Speaker AThe church is Made up of people that are indwelled by the Spirit.
Speaker AAnd a healthy church is what we're going to see all the way back in verse one.
Speaker AI was reading this this week, I was like, wow, look at this.
Speaker AThe Holy Spirit on the day of Pentecost pours out upon them and, and we see all these wonderful things happen.
Speaker ABut.
Speaker ABut over and over again we see a theme, verse number one.
Speaker AAnd when the day of Pentecost was fully come, they were all with one accord in one place.
Speaker AI want you to think about that phrase, one accord.
Speaker AIt's unity there throughout the book of Acts, when we see the Spirit of God moving.
Speaker AIt's when believers are in one accord, when there's unity.
Speaker AAnd over and over again we see that.
Speaker AThen at the end of the chapter two, we see again verse 42.
Speaker AAnd they continued steadfastly in the apostles doctrine and fellowship and in breaking of bread and in prayers and, and we see all of this happening in such a way that shows that they had all things in common, verse 44.
Speaker AAnd all that believe were together and had all things in common.
Speaker AAnd so they're walking in one accord in the fellowship of the Spirit.
Speaker ASo we would say, what makes a healthy church?
Speaker AWell, a lot of people, a lot of money, a lot of buildings.
Speaker ANo, biblically speaking, what makes a healthy church is a church that is made up of individuals indwelled by the Spirit, fellowshipping one with another.
Speaker AThat is a healthy church who as the church is following the commands of God, which is the great commission, which is loving one another.
Speaker AAnd so through all of the book of Acts, we could sit there and we could say, well that's a different time for a different place.
Speaker AAnd yes, there were things happening in a distinct way at that age because that was a transitionary period.
Speaker AWe know that.
Speaker AWe know that the book of Acts was a transitionary period when the complete word of God was not revealed yet.
Speaker ASo there were miraculous things happening, things that aren't what we would call typical.
Speaker ABut at the same time we know that there are.
Speaker AThere, there are some commonalities in the book of Acts that we must continue on today.
Speaker AAnd I believe that what we can say is that it's of one accord, walking in the Spirit together as a family.
Speaker AAnd we can go deeper into this.
Speaker ABut in Acts chapter two, the very end, it says, and the Lord added to the church daily, such as to be saved, meaning the church was not a one time a week convenient thing that people were doing.
Speaker AIt was a daily thing they were do as the Phrase.
Speaker AOne author put it this way.
Speaker AAs I was reading about the early church says they were doing life together.
Speaker AThey were doing life together, meaning they were living their lives as one body of believers.
Speaker AAnd so throughout all the Book of Acts, we.
Speaker AWe see that.
Speaker AAnd then, of course, toward the tail end, we see Paul's missionary journey, and we see that Paul was launched out.
Speaker ASo there was a fellowship of believers that launched Paul and his team out.
Speaker AAnd so it's not a stationary thing.
Speaker AI think that's the beautiful thing about the Book of Acts.
Speaker AIt didn't just stay in Jerusalem, right?
Speaker AIt spread.
Speaker AAnd Paul went out and gave the word and was a missionary, and there was evangelism and there was growth.
Speaker AAnd that's what we want to see.
Speaker AWe want to see Middletown Baptist Church here.
Speaker AFirst and foremost, we're unified.
Speaker AWe're of one accord.
Speaker AWe.
Speaker AWe have a purpose.
Speaker ABut then at the same time, we want to go, we want to send.
Speaker AWe.
Speaker AWe want to reach people for the cause of the Gospel.
Speaker AAnd so that's, I think, the summary of the Book of Acts.
Speaker AWe'll get to more of the summary later on.
Speaker ABut In Acts, chapter 28, we see essentially Paul eventually gets to Rome.
Speaker AAnd it doesn't end there.
Speaker AI mean, the book ends there, but we know the story continues on.
Speaker AAnd some people are asking where we're going after the Book of Acts.
Speaker AWe'll let you know as soon as we can.
Speaker ABut I'm sure that it'll be profitable.
Speaker AWhy?
Speaker ABecause the Bible says all scripture is given by inspiration of God as profitable for doctrine, for approved, for correction, for instruction and righteousness.
Speaker ASo appreciate your time in this study.
Speaker AI know that some of these studies can be long.
Speaker AThe Book of Acts has been a long, long, long study.
Speaker AJust like some of you that sat through all the book of Genesis, some of you remember that we went through the whole book of Genesis.
Speaker AThose are long studies, but important because the reason why we want to preach a book is because that's how it was originally written.
Speaker AIt was written to be understood as a whole idea.
Speaker ASo if we just take one verse and use one verse, that can be applied.
Speaker ADefinitely the Word of God does not return void.
Speaker ABut at the same time, I think we can have a greater understanding when we see the bigger passages put together so that we can understand these things from, I think, a clearer understanding, understanding, so that we can apply the truths of the Word of God, so that we're not just hearers of the Word, but doers, so that we're like the man who builds his house upon the sure foundation and not upon the sand.
Speaker AAnd so some people, I was, I was teaching this a little while back and someone says, what are some of the examples of the sand?
Speaker AI would say anything outside of the sure foundation of Jesus Christ, right?
Speaker ASo you could say anything, any.
Speaker AThe sand and the foundation that's going to be washed away can be anything.
Speaker AIt could be good things.
Speaker AIt could be, it could be something that we would deem to be not devastating to our life.
Speaker ABut if it's anything outside of the truth of Jesus Christ, then we're not building our house upon the rock.
Speaker AWe're building it upon something that is going to be torn away.
Speaker ASo think about it from the perspective of this and then we'll be done.
Speaker AThe storms are going to come.
Speaker AYou're in the ship of light.
Speaker AStorms are going to come.
Speaker AAnd there might be times, believe it or not, that you will be shipwrecked, but at the end of the day, God will keep his word.
Speaker AGod has a plan and a purpose for you.
Speaker ANot saying that it's going to go the way you expected to go.
Speaker AI'm not going to say that it's going to even go in a way that keeps you safe.
Speaker ARight?
Speaker ABut I would.
Speaker AYou know what, it would be amazing if there was.
Speaker AI, I've always said this.
Speaker AI.
Speaker AA time machine would be really cool.
Speaker AI mean, what if we could bring Paul right here and Paul's here and I say, paul, tell everybody that trusting in Jesus makes you live a safe life and everything will be fine.
Speaker AAnd if you could speak English and understand it, he would laugh.
Speaker AHe would say, oh really?
Speaker AYou want to know what it's like to live for Christ?
Speaker AAnd he would explain to us.
Speaker AAnd I'm not saying that's what we all have to go through, but what I am saying is that the promise of God is not smooth sailing.
Speaker APromise of God is that he's with us in the midst of the shipwreck.
Speaker AHe's in, he's in it with us and he's experienced it all.
Speaker AWe have a high priest who, who understands us, who knows us, and who is there preserving us through, through all of the storms of life.
Speaker ASo hope that that is is applicable for your life here today.
Speaker AThank you again for listening to the Middletown Baptist Church podcast.
Speaker AI hope that this sermon has been a blessing for you.
Speaker AYou would like to find out more information about our church or this sermon, you can find us at middletownbaptistchurch.org or find us on Facebook or YouTube.
Speaker AYou can also email me directly at Josh Massaro@middletownbaptistchurch.com if you've enjoyed this podcast, please subscribe and follow along for future podcast and updates.
Speaker AThank you so much.
Speaker AGod Bless.
Speaker AHave a wonderful day.