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Michael Easley Sermons

Michael Easley Sermons

De: Michael Easley
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Verse by Verse Bible teaching from Dr. Michael Easley. From the ministry of Michael Easley inContext.All rights reserved Cristianismo Espiritualidad Ministerio y Evangelismo
Episodios
  • Psalm 31: Trusting God in Times of Stress
    Apr 13 2026
    Summary In this sermon, Dr. Michael Easley walks through Psalm 31, exploring the believer’s response to stress, fear, and overwhelming circumstances. Using the Holmes-Ray stress scale as a starting point, he highlights how life’s pressures—from the death of a spouse to everyday challenges—can leave us drained and anxious. David’s Psalm provides a powerful blueprint for handling stress: an urgent cry for help followed by confident trust in God. Easley emphasizes how David repeatedly places his life “into God’s hand,” demonstrating that ultimate safety and deliverance come not from human control but from trusting God’s righteousness and lovingkindness. The sermon explores the tension between terror and trust, showing that even in fear, believers can choose praise and confidence in God. Easley also points out that God may not always remove stress but provides the strength to endure it. He encourages listeners to redirect their anxious energy toward worship and reliance on Christ. By learning to surrender control, trusting God’s presence, and finding rest in His provision, believers cultivate endurance, maturity, and spiritual resilience. This message reminds us that our trials are opportunities to experience God’s faithfulness and to develop deeper trust, even amid life’s storms. Takeaways Life’s pressures are inevitable, but God sees your stress and hears your prayers. David models placing his life fully into God’s hand, trusting His righteousness. Trusting God does not always remove trials, but provides strength to endure them. Even in terror and despair, believers can choose praise and confidence in God. Redirect anxious energy toward Christ through worship, prayer, and surrender. Endurance through trials matures faith and deepens spiritual resilience. To read the Psalms, click here. Click here for other Michael Easley Sermons.
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    27 m
  • Psalm 25: Waiting on God When Life Doesn't Make Sense
    Apr 6 2026
    Summary Why is it often easier to trust God with eternity than with today? In this sermon on Psalm 25, Dr. Michael Easley walks through David’s honest prayer and exposes a tension many believers feel: we trust Christ to save us forever, but struggle to trust Him with our health, family, future, finances, pain, and uncertainty right now. David’s prayer is raw, vulnerable, and deeply relatable. He is surrounded by enemies, burdened by sin, and desperate for God’s help—yet he keeps coming back to the character of God. This message reminds us that God is not only the God who saves us in the end, but the God who leads us in the middle. He teaches sinners, guides the humble, forgives the guilty, and meets the lonely and afflicted with compassion and steadfast love. Michael highlights how spiritual maturity is often formed not through ease, but through pain, waiting, and dependence. At the center of the psalm is a simple but powerful prayer: “Pardon my iniquity, for it is great.” And the good news is that God forgives not because we ask perfectly, but because forgiveness is part of His very character. If you are weary, waiting, hurting, or struggling to trust God in the unknown, this sermon will meet you there. Takeaways: Many believers trust God for salvation but struggle to trust Him with the daily uncertainties of life. Psalm 25 shows that David brought both his external troubles and internal sin honestly before the Lord. God’s compassion and lovingkindness are rooted in His covenant character, not in our performance. The Lord delights to teach, lead, and instruct those who are humble enough to learn. God forgives for His name’s sake, which means our hope rests in His character, not our ability to ask perfectly. Waiting is often one of God’s primary tools for spiritual growth, maturity, and deeper trust. To read the Psalms, click here. Click here for other Michael Easley Sermons.
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    44 m
  • Psalm 22: When God Feels Far Away
    Mar 30 2026
    Summary In this sermon on Psalm 22, Dr. Michael Easley walks through one of the most honest and prophetic passages in Scripture. The psalm opens with the shocking words, “My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?”—a cry that many believers feel but rarely say out loud. David expresses deep anguish as he wrestles with the tension between what he knows about God and what he currently experiences. Though he feels abandoned, he refuses to stop praying. Dr. Easley shows how the psalm moves in cycles between despair and trust. David remembers God’s past faithfulness even while enemies surround him and God seems silent. Yet the turning point comes when David shifts his focus from his circumstances to God’s presence. His greatest request is not immediate rescue, but renewed closeness with the Lord. The sermon then highlights the powerful connection between Psalm 22 and the crucifixion of Jesus. The descriptions of suffering, mockery, and even the casting of lots for clothing point forward to Christ. While David asks to be delivered from death, Jesus delivers us through His death. Psalm 22 ultimately moves from personal suffering to public worship and global hope. The message reminds believers to keep praying, trust God in seasons of silence, and continue telling the story of Christ from generation to generation. Takeaways: Psalm 22 shows that believers can honestly bring their deepest anguish to God without pretending everything is fine. David wrestles with the tension between his theology about God and his painful experience of feeling abandoned. Even when God feels silent, the faithful response is to keep praying rather than walking away. The psalm vividly foreshadows the suffering and crucifixion of Jesus Christ. Jesus did not escape suffering like David desired—He endured it to save us. The message of Christ’s work must continue from one generation to the next until the whole world hears. To read the Psalms, click here. Click here for other Michael Easley Sermons.
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    30 m
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