Sermon Messages

Feast of Trumpets: Come Let Us Go Up!

Isaiah 2:1-5

CM
Crossway Mission Church
Teaching Ministry
September 21 2025

This sermon presents the Feast of Trumpets as a season of awakening, preparation, and hopeful expectancy. Preaching from Isaiah 2:1-5 and the wider biblical meaning of the feast, the message explains that this is the civil new year in the biblical calendar and the beginning of a season tied to final harvest, the coming King, and the preparation of the heart. The sermon connects the Feast of Trumpets to end-times longing and to the prophetic call to be watchful and ready. The hope of the message is that God awakens his people not into fear, but into expectation, holiness, and readiness for the kingdom he is bringing to completion. Let this season awaken your heart rather than leaving you spiritually sleepy or distracted. Ask what areas of your life need renewed readiness, repentance, and expectancy before the Lord. Treat the call to prepare as an invitation into hope-filled alertness, not anxiety. Lord, awaken our hearts in this season and teach us to live with watchfulness, holiness, and expectancy. Prepare us for your kingdom, align our lives with your purposes, and let us respond to your call with hope and readiness.

  • The sermon begins with the greeting of the biblical new year and the explanation of the Feast of Trumpets within the calendar of Scripture.
  • It then opens the feast's themes of civil renewal, final harvest, Jubilee preparation, and the coming King.
  • The message links these ideas to Isaiah 2 and to John the Baptist's call to prepare the way of the Lord.
  • It also explains how the autumn feasts remain only partially fulfilled, creating an atmosphere of watchfulness and anticipation.
  • The sermon closes by urging the church to awaken its heart and prepare for what God is yet to complete.

Let this season awaken your heart rather than leaving you spiritually sleepy or distracted. Ask what areas of your life need renewed readiness, repentance, and expectancy before the Lord. Treat the call to prepare as an invitation into hope-filled alertness, not anxiety.

Lord, awaken our hearts in this season and teach us to live with watchfulness, holiness, and expectancy. Prepare us for your kingdom, align our lives with your purposes, and let us respond to your call with hope and readiness.

Sermon Messages September 21 2025 36:15

Feast of Trumpets: Come Let Us Go Up!

Isaiah 2:1-5

Crossway Mission Church Teaching Ministry
Description

Message Summary

Sermon Messages Isaiah 2:1-5

This sermon presents the Feast of Trumpets as a season of awakening, preparation, and hopeful expectancy. Preaching from Isaiah 2:1-5 and the wider biblical meaning of the feast, the message explains that this is the civil new year in the biblical calendar and the beginning of a season tied to final harvest, the coming King, and the preparation of the heart. The sermon connects the Feast of Trumpets to end-times longing and to the prophetic call to be watchful and ready. The hope of the message is that God awakens his people not into fear, but into expectation, holiness, and readiness for the kingdom he is bringing to completion. Let this season awaken your heart rather than leaving you spiritually sleepy or distracted. Ask what areas of your life need renewed readiness, repentance, and expectancy before the Lord. Treat the call to prepare as an invitation into hope-filled alertness, not anxiety. Lord, awaken our hearts in this season and teach us to live with watchfulness, holiness, and expectancy. Prepare us for your kingdom, align our lives with your purposes, and let us respond to your call with hope and readiness.

  • The sermon begins with the greeting of the biblical new year and the explanation of the Feast of Trumpets within the calendar of Scripture.
  • It then opens the feast's themes of civil renewal, final harvest, Jubilee preparation, and the coming King.
  • The message links these ideas to Isaiah 2 and to John the Baptist's call to prepare the way of the Lord.
  • It also explains how the autumn feasts remain only partially fulfilled, creating an atmosphere of watchfulness and anticipation.
  • The sermon closes by urging the church to awaken its heart and prepare for what God is yet to complete.

Let this season awaken your heart rather than leaving you spiritually sleepy or distracted. Ask what areas of your life need renewed readiness, repentance, and expectancy before the Lord. Treat the call to prepare as an invitation into hope-filled alertness, not anxiety.

Lord, awaken our hearts in this season and teach us to live with watchfulness, holiness, and expectancy. Prepare us for your kingdom, align our lives with your purposes, and let us respond to your call with hope and readiness.

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