Feast of Tabernacles: The Mystery of the Pomegranate
Psalm 34:1-10
This Feast of Tabernacles sermon invites the church to look at the pomegranate not simply as a symbol, but as a doorway into the mystery of abundance, praise, and the goodness of God. Through Psalm 34, the message likely turns the feast into a season of tasting and seeing that the Lord is good. The hope in the sermon is that God's presence is not meager or reluctant. He is abundant in goodness, and he teaches his people to live with praise, wonder, and fullness before him. Practice praise until it becomes more than a reaction. Let the goodness of God shape the way you see abundance, worship, and the symbols that point you back to his faithful presence. Lord, teach us to taste and see your goodness again. Fill us with praise, enlarge our sense of your abundance, and let your presence become our joy in every season.
- The sermon pairs the feast setting with Psalm 34 and the imagery of the pomegranate, drawing symbolic meaning into worship and praise.
- It likely moves from sign to substance, showing how visible images can train the heart to perceive God's abundance and goodness.
- The feast becomes a school of praise.
- Practice praise until it becomes more than a reaction.
- Let the goodness of God shape the way you see abundance, worship, and the symbols that point you back to his faithful presence.
Practice praise until it becomes more than a reaction. Let the goodness of God shape the way you see abundance, worship, and the symbols that point you back to his faithful presence.
Lord, teach us to taste and see your goodness again. Fill us with praise, enlarge our sense of your abundance, and let your presence become our joy in every season.
Feast of Tabernacles: The Mystery of the Pomegranate
Psalm 34:1-10