Faith Bible Church Sermons

Faith Bible Church

Sermons from Faith Bible Church in The Woodlands, Texas.

  1. May 17

    Nehemiah Chapter 10

    Pastor Russell Johnson preached through Nehemiah 10, the chapter where Israel's confession and prayer from chapter 9 become a signed, public covenant. Pastor Russell opened with two stories about the weight of putting your name on something — the fifty-six men who signed the Declaration of Independence knowing their signatures were evidence of treason, and his own experience as a newlywed sitting in a Ford dealership in Grand Prairie, Texas, physically nauseous as he initialed page after page of a car loan. "That's what a signature does. It turns desires into commitment." Eighty-four leaders affixed their seals to a document, and then the rest of the community — wives, sons, daughters, everyone old enough to understand — joined in, taking on themselves "a curse and an oath to walk in God's law." Pastor Russell stressed this was not an attempt to earn God's love but a response to the extravagant grace of chapter 9: "Biblical repentance is not about trying to clean yourself up so God will finally accept you. It's responding to God honestly enough that your direction begins to change." He walked through three specific commitments the people made. First, a marriage commitment — refusing intermarriage with pagan nations, not as a racial prohibition but as a protection of distinctive worship, with Solomon as the cautionary example. Second, a Sabbath commitment — refusing to buy from merchants on the Sabbath, letting the land rest every seventh year, and canceling debts, all of which cost something real and required trusting God to provide. Third, a worship commitment — funding the temple through annual contributions, organizing firewood supply ("no wood, no worship"), bringing firstfruits, and tithing, with the phrase "house of our God" appearing nine times. Pastor Russell closed with Joseph of Arimathea and Nicodemus — secret followers who finally went on the record at the cross, in daylight, with everyone watching — and asked the congregation: "Where do you need to make a specific commitment to honor God in response to His faithfulness?"

    43 min
  2. May 10

    Nehemiah Chapter 9

    Pastor Russell Johnson preached through Nehemiah 9, the longest prayer in the Old Testament and the spiritual climax of the book. Pastor Russell opened with the story of Bill Miller — a man who in 1940 crashed his car into a snowbank at 110 miles an hour and was pulled out by a stranger named Warren Felty. Five years later, Miller collapsed during a POW march through Germany, and Warren Felty dragged him back to his feet. Years after that, Felty showed up at a roadside diner and solved Miller's career problem. "At some point, you just stop being surprised. The man cannot shake Warren Felty." That, Pastor Russell said, is the story of Nehemiah 9 — except the one who keeps showing up is God, and the nation that spent centuries trying to shake Him could not. Two days after the Feast of Tabernacles, the people assembled in sackcloth and dust, alternating three hours of Scripture reading with three hours of confession and worship. The Levites led them through Israel's entire history — creation, Abraham, Egypt, Sinai, the wilderness, the conquest — with God as the subject of every sentence and every verb: He chose, He called, He saw, He divided, He led, He gave. Then two words pivoted the prayer: "But they." Five times a version of that phrase appeared, each followed by arrogance, idolatry, rebellion, and the killing of prophets. And each time, God showed back up. "You, in Your great compassion, did not forsake them." The prayer landed on three centuries of hardship and a sentence most people will move mountains to avoid: "You have dealt faithfully, but we have acted wickedly. You were right, and we were wrong." Then it simply stopped. No formal petition. No neat request. Just a nation standing before God and looking up. Pastor Russell closed with three applications: let the history of God's faithfulness inform your present faith, make confession specific rather than vague, and know that "you cannot shake God — His goodness is not triggered by our performance. It is His character."

    1h 37m
  3. May 3

    Nehemiah Chapter 8

    On Sunday, Pastor Russell Johnson continued through the book of Nehemiah, covering chapter 8 and a crisis that came from inside the community rather than from its enemies. Pastor Russell opened with the story of American contractors from Vermont and New York during the War of 1812 who supplied two-thirds of the advancing British army because the profits were too good to refuse — "myopic, self-defeating, and imprudent at the deepest level." Before entering the text, he established Proverbs 9:10 as the lens for the chapter, defining wisdom as "the skill of living well" and the fear of the Lord as "a settled, life-shaping orientation toward God." He then walked through three layers of economic devastation inside Jerusalem — families unable to eat, landowners mortgaging everything to survive a famine, and families whose children were already enslaved to pay crushing debts — all caused by wealthy Jewish nobles exploiting their own people. Pastor Russell called it "what the absence of the fear of God produces — it makes you dumb and can even make you mean." He traced Nehemiah's response as wisdom in action: anger proportional to the wrong, deliberate reflection before speaking, a public assembly to confront a community-wide sin, and an immediate demand for full restoration. He then walked through Nehemiah's twelve-year record as governor — declining his food allowance, feeding 150 people daily at his own expense, refusing to acquire land — all driven by the fear of God rather than political calculation. Pastor Russell closed with an honest acknowledgment that injustice among God's people is real, a direct apology to those wounded by the church, and a Dallas Willard quote defining disciples as "people who are constantly revising their affairs to carry through on their decision to follow Jesus."

    39 min
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Sermons from Faith Bible Church in The Woodlands, Texas.