Sermon Title: Creation Speaks: Listening to God’s Voice in Nature
Occasion: 4th Week after Pentecost | June 28, 2026.
Bible Readings: Zach. 8: 18-23 | Psalm 66 | Epistle Rom. 10: 9-17 | Gospel John 1: 39-42 | Micah 4: 1-5/2 Tim. 2: 1-13.
Original Language Reflections (For deeper study, refer to the Table of Hebrew and Greek Terms in Section IX. of the sermon).
Website: www.reverendbvr.com
Theological Thesis: Discipleship in Scripture is a movement from encounter to confession to participation in God’s mission.
We “come and see” the living Christ; we confess with heart and mouth that He is Lord; and we “go and tell,” becoming instruments through whom God gathers the nations into His peace. Discipleship is not private spirituality but public witness rooted in God’s reconciling character.
The readings for today: Zechariah, the Psalm, Romans, John, Micah, and 2 Timothy, do not merely align thematically. They form a coherent theological arc: God gathers; Christ reveals; the Church proclaims; the nations are invited; disciples endure.
I. “Come and See” The Invitation of Christ (John 1:39–42) :
When Jesus responds to the disciples’ question, “Rabbi, where are you staying?” He says, “Ἔρχεσθε καὶ ὄψεσθε” (Erchesthe kai opsesthe) means “Come and see.”
The verb ἔρχομαι (to come) is relational movement.
The verb ὁράω (to see) implies perception, recognition, revelation.
John’s Gospel never treats sight as mere eyesight. To “see” Christ is to perceive His identity. Andrew comes, sees, and then does what disciples always do: he goes to his brother Simon and declares, “Εὑρήκαμεν τὸν Μεσσίαν” means“We have found the Messiah.”
Notice the sequence:
- Invitation
- Abiding
- Recognition
- Witness
The text says they “remained” (ἔμειναν) with Him that day. Discipleship begins not with activism but with abiding presence.
In a restless age of digital distraction, Christ still says: Come. Stay. See.
II. Confession That Creates Community (Epistle to the Romans 10:9-17):
Paul writes: “ἐὰν ὁμολογήσῃς… κύριον Ἰησοῦν… καὶ πιστεύσῃς ἐν τῇ καρδίᾳ σου…”
“If you confess with your mouth Jesus as Lord and believe in your heart…”
Two words shape Christian identity:
- ὁμολογέω à to confess, to declare publicly.
- πιστεύω à to trust, to entrust oneself.
Discipleship is interior faith made audible. It is not coercion, not performance—but allegiance.
Paul then asks a chain of missionary questions:
- “How are they to believe in him of whom they have not heard?
And how are they to hear without someone preaching?”
The Greek word κηρύσσοντος (proclaiming) refers to heralding a royal announcement. Disciples are not inventors of truth; they are heralds of a King.
Thus the movement: Encounter → Confession → Proclamation.
III. The Nations Grasp the Robe (Book of Zechariah 8:18–23):
Zechariah envisions a day when:
“עֲשָׂרָה אֲנָשִׁים… וְהֶחֱזִיקוּ בִּכְנַף אִישׁ יְהוּדִי”
“Ten men… shall grasp the hem of a Jew’s garment.”
The verb הֶחֱזִיקוּ (heḥĕzîqû) — to seize, to hold firmly.
Why?
“For we have heard that God is with you.”
Israel’s vocation was missional: to be a visible sign that God dwells among a people.
This anticipates the Church’s calling. When disciples embody truth and peace, the nations say, “We have heard God is with you.”
IV. A Mountain of Peace (Book of Micah 4:1–5):
Micah proclaims: “They shall beat their swords into plowshares.”
The Hebrew שָׁלוֹם (shalom) means wholeness, harmony, flourishing.
Discipleship is not merely verbal evangelism. It is participation in God’s peaceable kingdom.
In a world fractured by violence, polarization, and digital hostility, disciples embody an alternative politics, the politics of reconciliation.
V. Thanksgiving and Testimony (Psalm 66):
The psalmist invites: “לְכוּ וּרְאוּ” means “Come and see what God has done.”
Remarkably, this mirrors Jesus’ “Come and see.”
Salvation history moves from Israel’s testimony to Christ’s invitation to the Church’s proclamation.
VI. Enduring Witness (Second Epistle to Timothy 2:1-13):
Paul urges Timothy: “Be strengthened by the grace that is in Christ Jesus.”
The Greek ἐνδυναμοῦ (be strengthened) implies empowerment from beyond oneself.
Discipleship involves endurance. Mission requires resilience. Faithfulness may cost.
Yet we hold to the confession: “If we are faithless, he remains faithful.”
The Coherent Biblical Narrative Across these texts:
| S.No | Movement | Old Testament | Gospel | Epistle |
| 1 | Invitation | “Come and see” (Psalm 66) | “Come and see” (John 1) | Faith comes by hearing |
| 2 | Gathering Nations | Zechariah 8 | Andrew brings Peter | Proclamation to all |
| 3 | Peaceable Kingdom | Micah 4 | Jesus renames Peter | Endurance in mission |
The God of Israel gathers.
Christ reveals the Father.
The Church confesses and proclaims.
The nations are invited into peace.
The Collect in Theological Light:
“God of Truth and Peace…”
Truth without peace becomes harsh ideology.
Peace without truth becomes vague tolerance.
In Christ, truth and peace embrace (Psalm 85:10).
The Collect rightly prays for empowerment to bear witness among all people.
Witness (Greek: μαρτυρία) implies testimony i.e., even costly testimony.
Contemporary Application:
- Slow Down and Abide – Discipleship begins in presence, not productivity.
- Confess Publicly – Faith must be spoken in love.
- Live as a Signpost – Let your life make others curious about God.
- Work for Peace – Practice reconciliation in families and communities.
- Endure Faithfully – God remains faithful even when we struggle.
In an anxious, divided world, the Church must not retreat into private devotion nor rage into cultural hostility. We are invited to be visible witnesses of hope.
Key Biblical Words Table (For Teaching & Notes)
| S.No | Passage | Verse | Original Word | Language |
| 1 | John 1:39 | Ἔρχεσθε | Greek | Come |
| 2 | John 1:39 | ὄψεσθε | Greek | You will see |
| 3 | John 1:41 | Μεσσίας | Greek | Messiah |
| 4 | Romans 10:9 | ὁμολογήσῃς | Greek | Confess |
| 5 | Romans 10:9 | πιστεύσῃς | Greek | Believe |
| 6 | Romans 10:14 | κηρύσσοντος | Greek | Proclaiming |
| 7 | Zech. 8:23 | הֶחֱזִיקוּ | Hebrew | Grasp firmly |
| 8 | Micah 4:3 | שָׁלוֹם | Hebrew | Peace, wholeness |
| 9 | Psalm 66:5 | לְכוּ וּרְאוּ | Hebrew | Come and see |
| 10 | 2 Tim. 2:1 | ἐνδυναμοῦ | Greek | Be strengthened |
Conclusion Prayer:
Lord Jesus Christ,
You who call us to come and see,
Keep us near enough to behold Your glory,
Humble enough to confess You as Lord,
Bold enough to proclaim Your salvation,
Gentle enough to embody Your peace,
Strong enough to endure in faithfulness.
Gather the nations to Your mountain of peace.
Let our lives whisper and our words declare
That God is with us.
Strengthen us by grace,
Shape us by truth,
Send us in love.
In the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.
Bibliography:
- Raymond E. Brown, The Gospel According to John I–XII, AB 29 (New York: Doubleday, 1966), 79–84.
- Douglas J. Moo, The Epistle to the Romans, NICNT (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1996), 654–670.
- Mark J. Boda, The Book of Zechariah, NICOT (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2016), 492–510.
- Bruce K. Waltke, A Commentary on Micah (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2007), 188–210.
- Gordon D. Fee, 1 and 2 Timothy, Titus, NIBC (Peabody: Hendrickson, 1988), 233–245.
© 2025 ReverendBVR.com | High-Academic Sermon Series, 2026.
Content licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0). You are free to share, copy and redistribute the material in any medium or format with proper attribution. No commercial use or modifications allowed without explicit permission.
For further sermons and biblical reflections, please visit 🌐 www.reverendbvr.com/sermons


Leave a Reply