

Bent Oak Church
Pastor Chase Replogle
This is the sermon podcast for Bent Oak Church. Each week we preach through scripture, book by book. You can find more information about the church at bentoakchurch.org
Episodes
Mentioned books

May 21, 2020 • 24min
Peace for Jerusalem (Psalm 122)
As we continue our way through the psalms of ascent, Psalm 122 looks ahead to the final destination—Jerusalem. The psalmist anticipates the joy of passing through her gates and being a part of Jerusalem's community for worship. The psalm concludes with a series of prayers for peace.

May 15, 2020 • 28min
When I'm Under Your Wing (Psalm 91)
If there is one psalm that might be most associated with our current crisis, it is surely Psalm 91. With its specific reference to protection from a plague, it’s not hard to see why.But Psalm 91 says something more—something better. We’ll attempt to see the whole psalm and how its promises build toward things we would never have had the boldness to request.

May 15, 2020 • 28min
Where Will My Help Come From (Psalm 121)
As we continue on the path, guided by the Psalms of Ascent, the psalmist begins to worry about all that can go wrong: accidents, weather, evil. Psalm 121 asks a very practical question. Where will our help come from?

May 15, 2020 • 19min
Beginning the Ascent (Psalm 120)
This week, we begin a new section of the psalms known as the Psalms of Ascent. They were often read by travelers as they approached Jerusalem for one of Israel’s religious festivals.They have long been used by other believers as an analogy for their own pilgrimage toward God. They teach us to reflect and pray about things we otherwise might not have considered.

Apr 24, 2020 • 31min
When I Worship (Psalm 118)
Happy Easter! The stone the builders rejected has become the cornerstone. There was no amount of power or money that could cover up his resurrection. Jesus was alive.It was all as he had predicted. And in predicting his vindication, Jesus turned to Psalm 118. It is a psalm of worship which captured the remarkable reversal of God's blessing on those men had rejected. It may have been this very psalm that was on Jesus' mind as he headed to the cross and that first morning of his resurrection.

Apr 24, 2020 • 23min
When I Follow (Psalm 23)
Psalm 23 is one of the most well-known passages in the Bible. But that familiarity comes with a challenge. Its images and ideas can pick up a sentimental nostalgia that keeps us from feeling the real impact of its message.Psalm 23 offers us the remarkable realization that the valley of death's shadow can be the very place the shepherd leads us to find green grass and calm water.

Apr 7, 2020 • 27min
When I'm Not in Control (Psalm 62)
David had accumulated everything a person could, wealth, power, position, but the rebellion of his own son Absalom left him devastated and fleeing for his life. It exposed how little control David actually had, how little control any of us have.Psalm 62 is David's reflection on this devastating time and how he urged himself to still trust in God's power and steadfast love.

Apr 7, 2020 • 31min
When I'm Alone in Darkness (Psalm 88)
The Bible is never sentimental about our suffering. It never peddles easy solutions or gimmicks. It is honest about the ways suffering leaves us feeling isolated and in darkness. But there is a kind of mercy in that this psalm even exists—that the Bible is willing to be this honest. That mercy trains us for our own days of suffering.Psalm 88 is known as an imprecatory psalm. It is one of the most extreme laments in the psalter. Yet it too has been a part of believer's worship for centuries.

Mar 23, 2020 • 22min
When I Am Afraid (Psalm 56)
The Psalms are characterized by frankness and honesty. And they don't imagine that believers escape the experience of human emotions. Instead, the Psalms catalog the human experience and instruct us on how to pray through our emotions. David's fearful prayer of Psalm 56 is a perfect example.

Mar 18, 2020 • 52min
Remember, Count, and Present (Romans 6:1-14)
Having established how believers had received justification and reconciliation, Paul turned his attention to the power of sin.If god's grace is free and more abundant where sin abounds than should Christians even worry about sin? Should we go on sinning so more grace will abound?Paul describes how believers have shared in the death and resurrection of Jesus. How can those who have died to sin now live in sin?


