Is God Powerful or Dangerous? (From our 10-19-25 worship) Podcast Por  arte de portada

Is God Powerful or Dangerous? (From our 10-19-25 worship)

Is God Powerful or Dangerous? (From our 10-19-25 worship)

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Watch the video version here: https://youtu.be/hn7K3F_lXmsHere’s a summary with clear section headings and bullet points of your sermon “Powerful or Dangerous?”Introduction: From Song Leading to ChemistryBegins by appreciating song leaders for their challenging role.Introduces the idea of chemistry—mixing elements to achieve desired results.Transitions to the theme of power and danger, using chlorine trifluoride (ClF₃) as an illustration.Illustration: Chlorine Trifluoride — Power and DangerDescribes ClF₃ as a hypergolic oxidizer—ignites on contact with almost anything, even asbestos.Story: A 2,000-lb cylinder ruptured in Shreveport, LA; it burned through 12" of concrete and 36" of gravel.Only controllable by removing oxygen—impossible during a fire.Though dangerous, it’s essential in semiconductor manufacturing where nothing else works better.Lesson: Used properly, it’s safe and useful; used wrongly, it’s catastrophic.Analogy: Power equals potential danger (e.g., guns vs. Nerf guns).Transition: What About God?Raises the central question:“Is God powerful? Yes. But is God dangerous?”Answer: It depends on how you treat Him.Misusing God—treating Him as a tool or token—can be deadly.Case Study 1: Israel Misuses God (1 Samuel 4)Israel loses to the Philistines, then decides to bring the Ark of the Covenant into battle as a good-luck charm.God does not bless their superstition—Israel is defeated again, 30,000 die, the Ark is captured, and Eli’s sons die.Lesson: You can’t use God for your own purposes.Modern example: People who only pray “when they need a favor” (Jelly Roll’s song lyric).Emotional appeal: How do you feel when someone uses you? God feels indignation too (Psalm 7:11 ESV — “God is a righteous judge, and a God who feels indignation every day.”)Case Study 2: Philistines Misuse God (1 Samuel 5)The Philistines put the Ark in the temple of Dagon.Next morning, Dagon’s statue falls face-down.Next day, its head and hands are cut off.God demonstrates His supremacy over idols.Insight: God becomes a “stumbling block” to those who reject Him (1 Peter 2:8).Application: The wicked destroy themselves on God’s truth—“The wicked flee when no one pursues” (Proverbs 28:1 ESV).Case Study 3: Israelites Look into the Ark (1 Samuel 6)When the Ark is returned, the men of Beth-shemesh look inside and 70 die.Even curiosity and carelessness toward God’s holiness are judged.Reminder: God’s grace allows mistakes, but not flippancy.Reference: Romans 6:1 ESV — “Are we to continue in sin that grace may abound? By no means!”Case Study 4: Putting God on the Shelf (1 Samuel 7:1–12)The Ark sits unused in Kiriath-jearim for 20 years.During that time Israel falls into idolatry and chaos.Finally, Samuel calls them to repent and serve God only.They obey, fast, and pray.God thunders against the Philistines and gives victory.Samuel sets up a stone of remembrance called Ebenezer, meaning “Till now the LORD has helped us” (1 Samuel 7:12 ESV).Application: The Ebenezer StoneEncourages everyone to take a physical stone home as a reminder:“Till now the LORD has helped us.”Place it where you struggle most—car, desk, home—as a visible sign of God’s help.Reminder: If God has helped us till now, He will continue to do so if we remain faithful.Closing InvitationGod is powerful, and misused power is dangerous.But when we honor Him rightly, His power protects, delivers, and comforts.2 Corinthians 1:3–4 ESV — “Blessed be the God... of all comfort, who comforts us in all our affliction, so that we may be able to comfort those who are in any affliction.”Invitation to respond—receive comfort, repent, or renew faith.Main IdeaPower becomes danger when misused. God’s power is life-giving only when we approach Him with obedience, reverence, and humility.
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