Sermon Series · The First Epistle to Timothy

1 Timothy

Paul's pastoral letter to a young minister — covering the ordering of worship, the qualifications of church officers, the role of men and women, and the priority of sound doctrine in the household of God.

1 Timothy 1–6 · The Apostle Paul · c. AD 62–64

Key Text

"I hope to come to you soon, but I am writing these things to you so that, if I delay, you may know how one ought to behave in the household of God, which is the church of the living God, a pillar and buttress of the truth."

Reference 1 Timothy 3:14–15
Testament New Testament · Pastoral Epistle
Recipient Timothy · Ephesus

The sermon was meant to be heard in the assembly. Join us this Lord's Day — audio is a gift, but the pew is better.

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How we preach

Expository preaching through the whole Bible.

We preach through books of the Bible — verse by verse, chapter by chapter — because we believe every part of Scripture has something to say to God's people in every age.

You will not find topical felt-needs preaching or motivational talks. You will find the text opened, the grammar examined, the context respected, the theology applied, and Christ proclaimed as the center of every text and the Lord of every corner of life.

01
The text drives the sermon
We do not preach our ideas illustrated from Scripture. We preach Scripture and apply it to life. The difference is everything.
02
Christ in all the Scriptures
Every text of Scripture ultimately points to Christ — his person, his work, his kingdom. We preach every book with this in view.
03
Law and Gospel together
God's law reveals our need. God's gospel meets it. Both are in every sermon — conviction and comfort in their proper order.
04
Applied to the whole of life
Scripture speaks to family, work, civil government, and culture — not just private piety. We preach the whole counsel of God for the whole of life.