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In this message, “A Tale of Two Kings,” Scott opens 2 Chronicles 14–16 and traces the life of King Asa, a leader who begins with courage and conviction but ultimately succumbs to pride and self-reliance. Asa tears down idols, leads Judah back to true worship, and cries out to God when a vast army threatens to wipe his nation out. God answers, scatters the enemy, and gives the land rest. But years later, when pressure comes again, Asa turns to human schemes and political deals instead of prayer. Confronted by a prophet, he hardens his heart, refuses to repent, and finishes his life leaning on physicians while refusing to seek the Lord.
From there, Scott points to the second King in this tale. Out of Asa’s broken line comes Jesus, the better King who never drifts, never compromises, and never fails. Where Asa’s diseased feet could no longer carry him, Jesus’ pierced feet carry the weight of our sin and win a victory that brings peace not just for a season but for eternity. Along the way, Scott presses into five honest invitations: to believe that God is real and active, to see delay as God’s waiting room rather than His rejection, to confess sin quickly, to trust the relentless promise of grace, and to order our lives around obedience. The sermon ends with a simple but searching question: not “Which king is better?” but “Which King truly rules your heart?”
Send Bibles to the persecuted church ($15 gets a needed Bible from the store to a persecuted saint.)
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By nations4jcIn this message, “A Tale of Two Kings,” Scott opens 2 Chronicles 14–16 and traces the life of King Asa, a leader who begins with courage and conviction but ultimately succumbs to pride and self-reliance. Asa tears down idols, leads Judah back to true worship, and cries out to God when a vast army threatens to wipe his nation out. God answers, scatters the enemy, and gives the land rest. But years later, when pressure comes again, Asa turns to human schemes and political deals instead of prayer. Confronted by a prophet, he hardens his heart, refuses to repent, and finishes his life leaning on physicians while refusing to seek the Lord.
From there, Scott points to the second King in this tale. Out of Asa’s broken line comes Jesus, the better King who never drifts, never compromises, and never fails. Where Asa’s diseased feet could no longer carry him, Jesus’ pierced feet carry the weight of our sin and win a victory that brings peace not just for a season but for eternity. Along the way, Scott presses into five honest invitations: to believe that God is real and active, to see delay as God’s waiting room rather than His rejection, to confess sin quickly, to trust the relentless promise of grace, and to order our lives around obedience. The sermon ends with a simple but searching question: not “Which king is better?” but “Which King truly rules your heart?”
Send Bibles to the persecuted church ($15 gets a needed Bible from the store to a persecuted saint.)
Receive the Courier Update
Support this podcast!