Feast of Trumpets: Who Is the King of Glory
Micah 7:18-20; Revelation 19:11-16
This Feast of Trumpets message asks the church to go deeper than simple right answers and to consider what it truly means to say that Jesus is the King of Glory. The sermon begins with the language of worship and worthiness and then presses into the heart-level question of why Jesus is worthy of glory, honor, and wholehearted surrender. Rather than settling for surface agreement, the message invites the congregation to examine what in their lives they are actually offering back to him. The hope of the sermon is that true worship grows deeper as believers recognize more fully who Jesus is and gladly return to him the glory that belongs to him.
- The sermon begins with prayer for the community and a sense that God is speaking specifically into this season.
- It then asks the central question, who is the King of Glory, and refuses to stop at the obvious answer.
- The message uses worship language to draw the church from surface affirmation into deeper reflection on worthiness, glory, and surrender.
- From there, the congregation is challenged to consider what it means in practice to say that all worship belongs to Jesus.
- The sermon closes by calling the church into deeper, more conscious worship.
Do not settle for repeating true words without letting them reach your heart. Ask what in your life you are truly offering to Jesus when you say he is worthy of it all. Let worship move beyond familiarity into conscious gratitude, reflection, and surrender.
Lord Jesus, you are the King of Glory and worthy of it all. Deepen our worship, reveal where our hearts still stay on the surface, and teach us to return to you the honor, beauty, and surrender that belong to your name.
Feast of Trumpets: Who Is the King of Glory
Micah 7:18-20; Revelation 19:11-16