Lawrence Street Church - Primitive Methodist - Lowell, MA

Lawrence Street Church - Primitive Methodist - Lowell, MA

by Dennis Knight
Season 5
When God Passes By - Mark 6:45-52
Episode Notes When God Passes By Text: Mark 6:45–52 Have you ever felt like God sees your struggle but seems to pass you by? In this message, we explore one of the most puzzling statements in Scripture: "He meant to pass by them" (Mark 6:48). At first glance, it sounds like Jesus intended to ignore His disciples in the middle of their storm. But a deeper look reveals something extraordinary. Throughout Scripture, when God "passes by," He is not abandoning His people—He is revealing His glory. In This Episode Why Jesus saw the disciples long before they saw Him What it means that Jesus walked on the water The biblical significance of God "passing by" Moses, Elijah, and Job How fear can cause us to miss what faith is meant to see Why Jesus declared, "I Am" in the middle of the storm The difference between seeking relief from a storm and seeking revelation within it Key Takeaways Jesus Sees You Even when progress is painfully slow and the wind feels against you, you are never outside of Christ's sight. Jesus Rules Over What Frightens You The storm that overwhelms us never overwhelms Him. What causes us panic remains under His feet. God Often Reveals Himself Before He Changes Circumstances The disciples wanted rescue. Jesus wanted revelation. Fear Distorts Vision When we focus on the waves, we often fail to recognize the Savior walking on them. Peace Comes From Presence, Not Circumstances The storm was still raging when Jesus said, "Take heart; I Am. Do not be afraid." Questions for Reflection What storm are you facing right now? What fears may be preventing you from recognizing God's presence? What might God be revealing about Himself in this season? Are you asking God only for relief, or are you seeking a deeper revelation of Christ? Memorable Quote "Jesus wasn't passing them by in neglect. He was passing by them in revelation." Scripture References Mark 6:45–52 Job 9:8–11 Exodus 33:18–23 1 Kings 19:11–13 Genesis 42:36 Romans 8:28 Final Thought Sometimes what feels like God's absence is actually His invitation to know Him more deeply. The disciples thought they were seeing a ghost. What they were actually seeing was the glory of God revealed in Jesus Christ. The question remains for us today: Will we recognize Him in the storm?
Season 2
What Are You Doing With What God Gave You?
What are you doing with what God has placed in your hands? In this message from Matthew 25:14–30, we explore Jesus' Parable of the Talents and discover that God isn't looking for comparison, perfection, or worldly success—He's looking for faithfulness. Learn how fear can keep us from fulfilling our calling, why faithfulness requires action, and how every believer has been entrusted with gifts, opportunities, and responsibilities meant for God's glory.
The Kinsman-Redeemer's Initiative
Ruth takes a bold step at the threshing floor. Following Naomi's guidance, she approaches the sleeping Boaz and makes a vulnerable request: "Spread your covering over me, for you are a kinsman-redeemer." Boaz wakes, startled, but responds with honor—he doesn't exploit her vulnerability. Instead, he promises to act as her redeemer, though there's a complication: another relative has a closer legal claim. The next morning, Boaz goes to the city gate and presents the situation to the other kinsman. When the man learns the full cost of redemption, he refuses. But Boaz steps forward without hesitation. He redeems the land. He takes Ruth as his wife. He becomes the kinsman-redeemer she needs.
Ruth 2- Provision & Providence
Ruth is desperate. She has nothing—no inheritance, no resources, no connections. So she does what widows in her situation had to do: she gleans in the fields, picking up leftover grain after the harvest. It's hard work for meager survival. But then something remarkable happens. Ruth "happens" to end up in the field of Boaz, a man of character, strength, and means. And Boaz doesn't just notice her—he goes far beyond what the law requires. He tells his workers to leave extra grain for her. He invites her to eat with his workers. He protects her from harassment. He gives her far more than she could have earned on her own. Here's the stunning part: God's provision was already in motion before Ruth and Naomi even knew they needed it. Boaz was already there. The field was already prepared. The kindness was already waiting. When Ruth comes home with an abundance of grain—30 pounds—Naomi's entire perspective shifts. She recognizes that God hasn't abandoned them after all. She sees Boaz as a kinsman-redeemer, someone who might restore what was lost. In that moment, Naomi moves from bitterness to hope. This is the story of how God provides through both His law and the compassion of His people. It's the story of how faithfulness—Ruth's hard work, Boaz's generosity—intersects with grace. And it's a reminder that God is often working behind the scenes, preparing provisions we haven't yet recognized. What You'll Learn God's provision often arrives before we recognize it. We're focused on the crisis, but God is already moving. He's already placed the right people in our path. We have to open our eyes to see it. Hesed (covenantal kindness) is more than the law requires. Boaz could have followed the minimum requirements for gleaning. Instead, he chose generosity. He chose to see Ruth's worth and act on it. That's the kind of kindness that changes lives. Recognition transforms everything. When Naomi sees God's hand at work through Boaz's kindness, her entire outlook changes. She moves from "God has abandoned me" to "God is still working." That recognition is the beginning of hope. Faithfulness and provision are connected. Ruth's hard work and humble service didn't go unnoticed. Boaz saw her character and responded. When we're faithful in what God has given us, we position ourselves to receive His provision.
Crisis & Choice - Ruth 1
What do you do when everything falls apart? When loss piles upon loss and the future looks hopeless? In this first episode of our four-part series on the book of Ruth, we explore one of Scripture's most powerful stories of faithfulness—and it begins in the darkest possible way. We meet Naomi, broken by famine, death, and exile. We meet Ruth, a young widow with nothing but the clothes on her back. And we witness a choice that changes everything. But here's what makes Ruth's story so compelling: She makes her choice without knowing how it will turn out. In the middle of a crisis, when everything seems lost, Ruth commits to something costly—to Naomi, to a foreign people, and to a God she's only seen through suffering. This episode explores how crisis reveals what we truly believe about God, why faithfulness often means choosing the harder path, and how our ordinary commitment becomes part of God's extraordinary story. What You'll Learn ✦ How crisis reveals our deepest theology—what we really believe about God when life falls apart ✦ The contrast between Ruth's radical commitment and Orpah's reasonable choice ✦ Why Ruth's decision to stay with Naomi was so costly—and so beautiful ✦ How God works through faithful obedience even when we can't see the outcome ✦ The connection between Ruth's story and the gospel of Jesus Christ
Ruth 4 - Restoration & Legacy
This is the final episode of the Ruth series. After three episodes of crisis, provision, and redemption, we finally see complete restoration. Ruth, who began as a desperate foreigner with nothing, becomes a wife, a mother, and a woman of honor. But the real miracle is Naomi's transformation. The woman who arrived in Bethlehem bitter and broken, calling herself "Mara," now holds her grandson Obed in her arms. The women of Bethlehem celebrate with her: "Blessed be the LORD, who has not left you this day without a redeemer!" (Ruth 4:14, ESV). Naomi goes from empty to full, from bitter to blessed. But here's where the story becomes eternal: Obed becomes the father of Jesse, who becomes the father of David, who becomes the ancestor of Jesus. A Moabite widow—a foreigner with no inheritance, no status, no future—is in the direct line of the Messiah. Ruth's ordinary faithfulness became part of God's extraordinary redemptive plan. She didn't know it. She couldn't have imagined it. But her legacy changed the world.
Season 1
Going To Pick a Fight
After Jesus' baptism, He was led by the Holy Spirit into the wilderness to face the temptation of Satan. Jesus is not a passive Savior. He went looking for a fight with the devil. A fight that He won.
God Plays the Long Game
The contrast between Jacob and his son, Joseph, teaches followers of Jesus that we must choose to believe that God is sovereignly in control of everything that happens to us and that He has promised good to us through all that He allows.
Heroic Faith
Heroic Faith is distinct from regular Faith. Faith in Jesus, through the gift of grace, results in eternal life with God. Heroic Faith also leads to eternity, but focuses on bringing others along with you.
Dusty Prayers and Long Memories
We all have dusty prayers that have long been not addressed by God - what we discover in the story of John the Baptist's birth announcement is the long memory of a God who keeps His promises to His people.
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