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Bill Teubl begins his Easter sermon by focusing on Ephesians 2 and Psalm 110, connecting the themes of resurrection life and authority in Christ. He emphasizes how salvation is not about reform but about being raised from spiritual death to new life through God’s grace. The sermon explores the practical implications of being seated with Christ in heavenly places and exercising authority over sin and worldly influences.
- [00:00:00] Introduces Ephesians 2 and Psalm 110, linking them to Christ’s authority and resurrection life.
- [00:01:07] Reads Ephesians 2:1-10, highlighting humanity’s deadness in sin and God’s grace in salvation.
- Key phrase: “But God” (v. 4) signifies divine intervention.
- [00:05:57] Explains that behavior reform is insufficient; salvation requires resurrection from spiritual death.
- [00:11:51] Contrasts worldly messages (e.g., “question authority”) with God’s authority delegated to believers.
- [00:18:20] Shifts to Psalm 110, focusing on Christ’s seated authority (v. 1) and believers’ shared authority.
- Sitting symbolizes resting in God’s work, not self-effort.
- [00:28:40] Describes believers as peacemakers (Melchizedek’s order) who extend God’s righteousness and reconciliation.
- [00:33:38] Concludes by affirming Christ’s resurrection as historical fact and its power for daily victory.
Scripture References
- Ephesians 2:1-10
- Psalm 110
- Romans 12:1-2
- Revelation 4-5
- Romans 13
- Genesis 14:18 (Melchizedek reference)
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