I Am the True Vine -- Concluding the Seven I Am Statements

Scripture References Isaiah 5:1-7 John 15:1-5 Introduction Last of the seven “I Am” statements in John: “I am the True Vine.” To surface the longings Jesus satisfies, six groups analyzed popular songs from six decades, each identifying the “cultural crisis” the lyrics reveal. Key Points / Exposition 1. Song-Analysis Exercise 1960s – “Eleanor Rigby” (The Beatles): pervasive loneliness despite crowds. 1970s – “Lyin’ Eyes” (Eagles): broken, inauthentic relationships. 1980s – “Don’t Stop Believin’” (Journey): misplaced hope in romantic euphoria. 1990s – “Iris” (Goo Goo Dolls): longing to be known yet fear of exposure. 2000s – “Fix You” (Coldplay): desire for someone human to save and “fix” us. 2010s – “Someone You Loved” (Lewis Capaldi): grief when that human source is lost. All songs spotlight the same vacuum: searching for a life-giving source that never fails. 2. Isaiah 5:1-7 – The Failed Vineyard God built Israel as His vineyard, sparing no care. Expectation: “good grapes.” Reality: only “bad fruit” (injustice and distress). Judgment: protection removed; vineyard laid waste. Cause: vines attached to wrong sources, not to God. 3. John 15:1-5 – Jesus, the True Vine Contrast: in the failed vineyard people were the vine; now Jesus is the vine. Father = vinedresser; believers = branches. Two divine actions, both involving cutting: Branches bearing no fruit are cut off (separation). Branches bearing fruit are pruned (cleansed) to bear more. “Apart from Me you can do nothing” – genuine fruit is impossible without abiding in Christ. Major Lessons & Revelations Isaiah’s vineyard song foreshadows John 15; Jesus fulfils what Israel could not. Bad fruit vs. no fruit: both are failure, yet bad fruit represents actively harmful output from wrong attachments. Pruning versus cutting off: same sharp instrument, different intent – restoration vs. removal. Grafting imagery raised: believers are re-attached to the healthy vine (Christ) for life and productivity. Practical Application Diagnose: Which of the three “locations” am I in? Not connected, no fruit. Connected, no fruit (needs pruning/repentance). Connected and bearing fruit (called to help others move up a level). Move one step nearer fruitful abiding: Re-connect through Scripture, prayer, obedience. Welcome the Father’s pruning; look for evident growth afterward. Use cultural artifacts (songs, media) as bridges to gospel conversations about true hope. Invest in branches “below” you – disciple and encourage them into fruitfulness. Conclusion & Call to Response Participants debated which is worse – no fruit or bad fruit – and linked it to the parable of the talents. Several observed that “box-checking” religion can leave a branch technically connected yet fruitless. Practical gardening input: shears vs. saw illustrated pruning vs. removal. Class collectively listed three “locations” believers may occupy and challenged each other to move toward greater fruitfulness. Prayer References & Resources Final session before a short break. Insights Jesus is the True Vine, planted by the Father; when we cling to Him, every hidden ache finds purpose and we burst with kingdom fruit, because His life now surges through ours. Culture offers glittering substitutes, yet every song of longing points beyond itself to the Son; come to Jesus and discover the only source that never disappoints or runs dry. The Father walks His vineyard with pruning shears of mercy; when He trims our habits and idols, He readies us to bear sweeter, stronger fruit for His glory. Apart from Christ we can do nothing, but united with Him we can face everything; abiding is daily trust, not occasional visits, to the power of His love. In a crowd or on a screen, you are never invisible to Heaven; Jesus knows you fully and invites you to be authentically known in Him. The Holy Spirit empowers every branch to lift another; as we share grace with neighbors, the vineyard of God overflows into a thirsty world.

March 28, 2026 · 3 min

Jesus -- "The Way, the Truth, and the Life"

Scripture References John 14:1-6 Exodus 13:21-22 Exodus 14:19-20 Numbers 9:15-23 Exodus 40:34-38 1 Kings 8:10-12 Introduction Opened with an invitation to serve in North Dallas (Friday or Saturday options, car-pooling encouraged, lunch/hang-out afterward). Leader affirmed how much he learns from the group’s dialogue; encouraged honest reactions to the sermon on hell and the exclusivity of Christ. Tonight’s “I AM” focus: Jesus’ claim, “I am the way, the truth, and the life” (John 14:6), explored through the lens of Tracy Chapman’s “Fast Car.” Key Points / Exposition 1. Cultural Crisis Common voices claim there are “many ways,” or that hell is unreal–contrasted with Jesus’ exclusivity. 2. Tracy Chapman’s “Fast Car” as a Modern Parable Lyrics portray escape, movement, and hope attached to new circumstances. The car symbolizes “means,” not “destination”; repeated cycles show that a change of scene rarely changes the heart’s condition. Musical tempo subtly accelerates, echoing rising anxiety and the sense of life speeding up without resolution. 3. Israel’s Wilderness Wanderings Parallel to OT passages: God visibly guided Israel, yet they still failed–movement without heart-change. 4. Jesus’ Answer to Thomas (John 14:5-6) He does not give a map but offers Himself. “The Way” is a relationship, not directions. Three human conditions met in Christ: Lost – need The Way. Confused – need The Truth. Spiritually dead – need The Life. 5. The Apostles as Models Their hope rested in eternal life, not favorable earthly outcomes. Willingness to suffer sprang from certainty about “where” and “with Whom” they were going. “Without the way, there is no going; without the truth, there is no knowing; without the life, there is no living.” Major Lessons & Revelations John 14 context: Upper Room Discourse; disciples troubled by betrayal, denial, and looming arrest–Jesus’ remedy is trust in Him. “Way/Truth/Life” construction is emphatic and exclusive–no one reaches the Father apart from Christ. OT cloud/fire passages illustrate God’s historic guidance; Jesus now embodies that guidance personally. Eternal prosperity (presence with God) is the ultimate promise; temporal ease is not guaranteed. Discussion: tension between hope for present relief and assurance of eternal security. If the apostles were martyred, where is our hope? – in their eagerness for eternal presence with Christ. Practical Application Evaluate personal “fast cars” (job change, relationship swap, relocation) relied on to fix inner emptiness; repent and turn to Christ instead. Seek Jesus daily as Companion and Destination rather than a GPS tool. Embrace peace that “makes no sense” amid chaos by anchoring identity in eternal life with Him. Read the listed OT passages this week to trace God’s faithful guidance. Sign up for the North Dallas service day; practice following “the Way” through tangible service. Musicians: consider using culturally familiar songs to surface spiritual longings in conversation. Conclusion & Call to Response Jesus is not a map or a method–He is the destination. Every “fast car” of circumstantial hope cycles back to emptiness; only the risen Christ changes the condition of the heart. Come to Him as Way, receive Him as Truth, live in Him as Life. Prayer Safe, fruitful North Dallas outreach with unity and joy. Success and safety for a fishing tournament. Hearts to exchange every “fast car” solution for deeper trust in Jesus. References & Resources Tracy Chapman, “Fast Car” OT cloud/fire passages: Exodus 13:21-22; 14:19-20; Numbers 9:15-23; Exodus 40:34-38; 1 Kings 8:10-12 Insights When the world tempts us to jump into a “fast car” of quick fixes, Jesus stands constant, whispering, “I am the way your restless heart is really chasing.” Follow His road. Changing scenery can’t heal a wounded soul, but the risen Christ can; draw near and you’ll discover peace that makes no earthly sense yet anchors every anxious moment in holy assurance. We often trade one dead-end for another, but the Father invites us into His family, where direction is not a map but a relationship with the Living God, guiding each faithful step. Serve boldly this weekend, for in lifting others we meet Christ Himself; the Holy Spirit turns ordinary lunches and Easter cards into eternal seeds that outlive every hurried schedule. Community conversation sharpens faith like iron on iron, because God designed us to learn more together than we ever will alone, reflecting His triune fellowship as we discuss music, Scripture and mission. Even when time feels like it’s speeding up, Christ offers rest; pause, breathe, and remember eternity is already secure for those who abide in His love, whatever today holds.

March 21, 2026 · 4 min

I Am the Light of the World

Scripture References John 8:12-20 Exodus 13:21-22 Isaiah 42:6-7 Introduction Leader opens with a personal update: son (22, Marine Corps, Camp Pendleton) placed on higher-alert status; unit itself non-deployable but he could be re-assigned. Group thanks members for earlier texts and prayers. Ice-breaker: “When you’re driving, would you rather be lost and moving or know where you’re going but be stuck in traffic?” – designed to explore control, patience, and adventure before linking to the Bible text. Key Points / Exposition 1. Context of John 8 Setting: Feast of Tabernacles in Jerusalem, Court of Women (Treasury area). Crowd includes Pharisees; tension high – officers had already tried and failed to arrest Jesus (John 7). 2. Second “I Am” Statement Jesus: “I am the light of the world. Whoever follows Me will not walk in darkness, but will have the light of life.” (v. 12) Two discussion questions: What is Jesus claiming? Why connect light to following? 3. Feast-of-Tabernacles Imagery Remembering wilderness wanderings: living in tents, total dependence on God. Temple courtyards lit with great lamps; light recalls: Pillar of cloud/fire guiding Israel (Ex 13:21-22). God’s promise of a “light for the nations” (Is 42:6-7). Leader’s summary: “What you’re commemorating is standing right in front of you.” 4. Pharisees’ Objection (v. 13) Attack on credibility: Jewish law requires two witnesses. Jesus’ reply (vv. 14-18): He alone knows His origin and destination. Judgment according to flesh vs. divine judgment. His two witnesses: Himself and the Father – satisfying their legal standard. 5. Knowledge of Father Linked to Knowledge of Son (v. 19) Failure to recognize Jesus exposes lack of true relationship with God despite religious status. 6. Providential Timing (v. 20) Attempted arrest thwarted: “His hour had not yet come.” Major Lessons & Revelations “Light” = divine revelation, guidance, salvation extended to the whole world. “Follow” implies surrender and relational trust, not mere intellectual assent. Jesus contrasts fleshly judgment (external status) with righteous judgment rooted in unity with the Father. Legal appeal to Deuteronomy’s two-witness rule shows Jesus meets even their courtroom standards while transcending them. Participants listed human standards of judgment: popularity, wealth, status, comparison. “Even surrender is a verb – action is required.” Practical Application Diagnose your “navigation style”: are you stalled in safe certainty or racing under self-direction? Hand the wheel to Christ. Cultivate habits that keep Jesus in constant view (Word, prayer, community). Measure judgments by God’s standards, not cultural markers. Embrace discomfort as the context where God’s guidance and growth occur. Replace self-sufficiency with daily, conscious surrender: “Be comfortable being uncomfortable.” Conclusion & Call to Response Cannot rely on instincts; must tether to Jesus. Practical ideas offered: accountability meet-ups, consistent Scripture reading, fellowship outside Sunday services. ...

February 28, 2026 · 4 min

Seven I AM Statements of Jesus

Scripture References Exodus 3:13-14 John 8:58-59 John 6:35 John 6:47-51 Matthew 6:33 Introduction New spring series: the seven “I AM” statements in John, running through Easter. Leader: Caleb. Ice-breaker: each man completed “I am ___” (e.g., “cool dude,” “loved,” “so grateful,” “duck-hunter,” etc.). Purpose: last summer’s seven signs revealed Jesus’ divinity; the seven “I AMs” show how that divinity meets human need. Key Points / Exposition 1. Cultural Longing Quotes and songs that capture restless desire: “To thine own self be true” (Hamlet), “I Can’t Get No Satisfaction” (Rolling Stones), “I Still Haven’t Found What I’m Looking For” (U2), “Boulevard of Broken Dreams” (Green Day), Coldplay’s “The Scientist.” Observation: society keeps admitting, “I’m not content.” 2. Humanity’s Contingency Every personal “I am” statement is dependent on something outside ourselves (success, ducks, candy, etc.). Question raised: “Are we contingent beings?” Consensus: yes – ultimately dependent on God. 3. God’s Self-Disclosure (Exodus 3:13-14) Moses asks God’s name; God replies, “I AM WHO I AM.” “I AM” (YHWH) is simultaneously complete and open-ended: God is self-existent, the answer to every “Are you…?” question. 4. Jesus’ Claim (John 8:58-59) Jesus: “Before Abraham was, I AM.” Pharisees attempt to stone Him because He unequivocally claims deity. 5. First “I AM” – Bread of Life (John 6:35, 47-51) “I am the bread of life; whoever comes to me shall not hunger, and whoever believes in me shall never thirst.” Contrast with manna: ancestors ate and died; Christ offers eternal life. Jesus is not offering symbolic motivation but true, self-sustaining nourishment. 6. Testimony (Jason) Years spent chasing money, status, and especially pornography. Hidden sin wrecked marriage; confession led him to Christ, recovery ministry, genuine relationship with God. Illustration: any vice can replace pornography in his story – the need and the remedy are identical. Major Lessons & Revelations “I AM” (YHWH): a deliberate, self-referential, circular expression affirming God’s eternal, self-sufficient being. Jesus as fulfillment: each “I AM” in John answers Israel’s wilderness needs (bread, light, shepherd, etc.). Bread motif: physical bread gives temporary energy; Christ supplies eternal life. Matthew 6:33 connects longing and priority: seeking God first aligns all other needs. “The problem is not that we want too much; the problem is that we settle for too little.” Practical Application Identify “what you’re currently feasting on that leaves you starving.” Action step from John 6:35 – “Whoever comes to me…”: Turn away (repent) from the empty source. Come to Jesus daily in Word, prayer, and dependence. Replace isolation with community: confess to trusted brothers and invite accountability. Seek first His kingdom (Matthew 6:33); allow God to reorder lesser desires. Group discussion: participants named cultural “indulgences” (food, alcohol, status, possessions, etc.) – most admitted never fully experiencing satisfaction apart from brief glimpses. Practical brainstorm: confession, surrender, repentance, Scripture intake, godly community, accountability groups (e.g., Regen). Conclusion & Call to Response Jesus is the only “I AM” who fully satisfies; every other identity anchor is contingent and will eventually fail. The spring series will trace each “I AM” statement through to Easter, showing how Christ meets every dimension of human need. Prayer Freedom from addictive indulgences (pornography, materialism, etc.). Deeper hunger for Christ as true bread. Courage for honest confession and sustained repentance among group members. References & Resources Seven “I AM” statements series in the Gospel of John Regeneration (Regen) recovery ministry Insights Because Jesus is the timeless I AM, He alone defines life, value and you; no other voice has the authority to tell you who you are, so rest your identity in His name. Every playlist and purchase shouts that we are hungry, yet only Christ whispers satisfaction; the Bread of Life fills the ache consumer culture keeps exposing, leaving hearts nourished instead of endlessly craving. Jesus invites weary strivers to trade circular tail-chasing for communion, promising, ‘Whoever comes to Me will never hunger or thirst again’; approach Him today and discover rest that performance can’t deliver. Confession turns us from empty man-made delicacies to a feast of grace; when we come away from sin and toward Jesus, our starving souls finally taste real life and learn freedom’s flavor. We are fragile, contingent breaths, but He is self-existent, needing nothing; leaning on the One who cannot fail transforms dependence from weakness into worship and lifts us above every shifting circumstance. The tragedy of sin is not wanting too much but settling for crumbs; Christ spreads an eternal table where holy abundance replaces the glazed-croissant crash of worldly pleasure, inviting us to feast deeply.

February 21, 2026 · 4 min