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St Marcus MKE Sermons

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Weekly Sermons from St. Marcus Lutheran Church, Milwaukee, Wisconsin
716 Episodes
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This week, we’ll be studying Mark 9:35-50 under the theme “The Spiritual Truths We Learn From Little Ones.” We find that Kingdom greatness doesn’t look like climbing over others—it looks like kneeling to serve them. In this passage, Jesus shows that true greatness is found in welcoming the “little ones,” embracing believers who aren’t just like us, and taking sin seriously.Series Summary: Fast-paced, urgent, and relentlessly focused on Jesus, the Gospel of Mark shows us not just what Jesus said, but what he did. Written for a Roman world hungry for power, Mark introduces a surprising King - one who comes to serve, to suffer, and to give his life for many. Over the coming weeks, we’ll walk this road with Jesus, from the wilderness to the cross, discovering how the Servant-King’s actions reveal the true good news - and what it means to follow him as disciples who take up our own cross and trust him with our lives.Add St. Marcus as your church on the Church Center App!Fill out our online connection cardHow can we pray for you? If you’d like to leave an offering or monetary donation to our ministry please click here.
God's most magnificent plan unfolds not through human power and strength, but through weakness—supremely demonstrated when Jesus willingly submitted to arrest and crucifixion in the Garden of Gethsemane. When we embrace our own weakness and dependence on Christ, we discover that God's power is made perfect in our vulnerability, transforming us into servants who reflect His upside-down kingdom values.Series Summary: The religious leaders at the cross hurled a challenge at Jesus: “Let this Messiah, this King of Israel, come down now from the cross, that we may see and believe.” They demanded proof before faith. But the Gospel of Mark, especially in its story of the Passion, invites us into a different reality: believing in order to see. From the anointing at Bethany to the silent emptiness of the tomb, Jesus’ journey subverts our expectations. The one hailed as king is crowned with thorns. The one with power to calm storms submits to arrest. The consistent, sure thread through the chaos is his Word. As the angel at the tomb reminded the trembling women, “He is going ahead of you…just as he told you.” As we study through Mark’s Passion, we are invited to follow Jesus—not by sight, but by faith in his sure and leading Word.Add St. Marcus as your church on the Church Center App!Fill out our online connection cardHow can we pray for you? If you’d like to leave an offering or monetary donation to our ministry please click here.
This week, we’ll study Mark 8:34–9:1 under the theme “A Death That Leads to Life. After Peter resists a suffering Messiah, Jesus makes it clear: you cannot follow him while trying to save yourself. The instinct to protect our plans, preserve our reputation, or maintain control when following him feels wise — but Jesus says it leads to loss. Only a crucified Messiah can show how losing your life could ever lead to finding it.Series Summary: Fast-paced, urgent, and relentlessly focused on Jesus, the Gospel of Mark shows us not just what Jesus said, but what he did. Written for a Roman world hungry for power, Mark introduces a surprising King - one who comes to serve, to suffer, and to give his life for many. Over the coming weeks, we’ll walk this road with Jesus, from the wilderness to the cross, discovering how the Servant-King’s actions reveal the true good news - and what it means to follow him as disciples who take up our own cross and trust him with our lives.Add St. Marcus as your church on the Church Center App!Fill out our online connection cardHow can we pray for you? If you’d like to leave an offering or monetary donation to our ministry please click here.
Jesus's prayer in the Garden of Gethsemane reveals how his honest struggle and faithful surrender show us how to navigate our darkest moments.  Through Jesus's example of prayer, patience, and trust in the Father's will, we learn that seeing in the dark means recognizing our weakness while trusting God's promises more than our current circumstances.Series Summary: The religious leaders at the cross hurled a challenge at Jesus: “Let this Messiah, this King of Israel, come down now from the cross, that we may see and believe.” They demanded proof before faith. But the Gospel of Mark, especially in its story of the Passion, invites us into a different reality: believing in order to see. From the anointing at Bethany to the silent emptiness of the tomb, Jesus’ journey subverts our expectations. The one hailed as king is crowned with thorns. The one with power to calm storms submits to arrest. The consistent, sure thread through the chaos is his Word. As the angel at the tomb reminded the trembling women, “He is going ahead of you…just as he told you.” As we study through Mark’s Passion, we are invited to follow Jesus—not by sight, but by faith in his sure and leading Word.Add St. Marcus as your church on the Church Center App!Fill out our online connection cardHow can we pray for you? If you’d like to leave an offering or monetary donation to our ministry please click here.
This week, we’ll be studying Mark 8:14-21 under the theme “This World’s Wrong Ideas.” Jesus warns the disciples about the “yeast” of the Pharisees and Herod — showing how the world’s wrong ideas quietly seep into our hearts and shrink our faith. If we’re not paying attention, we’ll worry about bread while the Bread of Life is sitting in the boat.Series Summary: Fast-paced, urgent, and relentlessly focused on Jesus, the Gospel of Mark shows us not just what Jesus said, but what he did. Written for a Roman world hungry for power, Mark introduces a surprising King - one who comes to serve, to suffer, and to give his life for many. Over the coming weeks, we’ll walk this road with Jesus, from the wilderness to the cross, discovering how the Servant-King’s actions reveal the true good news - and what it means to follow him as disciples who take up our own cross and trust him with our lives.Add St. Marcus as your church on the Church Center App!Fill out our online connection cardHow can we pray for you? If you’d like to leave an offering or monetary donation to our ministry please click here.
Peter boldly declares he'll never abandon Jesus, even as Christ predicts his three-time denial. As we ponder our Savior's passion, we're confronted with a freeing truth: our salvation isn't about being stronger or more faithful than others, but about what Jesus accomplished on the cross and through His resurrection.Series Summary: The religious leaders at the cross hurled a challenge at Jesus: “Let this Messiah, this King of Israel, come down now from the cross, that we may see and believe.” They demanded proof before faith. But the Gospel of Mark, especially in its story of the Passion, invites us into a different reality: believing in order to see. From the anointing at Bethany to the silent emptiness of the tomb, Jesus’ journey subverts our expectations. The one hailed as king is crowned with thorns. The one with power to calm storms submits to arrest. The consistent, sure thread through the chaos is his Word. As the angel at the tomb reminded the trembling women, “He is going ahead of you…just as he told you.” As we study through Mark’s Passion, we are invited to follow Jesus—not by sight, but by faith in his sure and leading Word.Add St. Marcus as your church on the Church Center App!Fill out our online connection cardHow can we pray for you? If you’d like to leave an offering or monetary donation to our ministry please click here.
This week, we will be studying Mark 7:24-30 under the theme “Even Her.” We learn that God’s grace crashes through every barrier — race, religion, reputation. We see a Savior who draws out bold faith and proves that the good news of Jesus overcomes all boundaries.Series Summary: Fast-paced, urgent, and relentlessly focused on Jesus, the Gospel of Mark shows us not just what Jesus said, but what he did. Written for a Roman world hungry for power, Mark introduces a surprising King - one who comes to serve, to suffer, and to give his life for many. Over the coming weeks, we’ll walk this road with Jesus, from the wilderness to the cross, discovering how the Servant-King’s actions reveal the true good news - and what it means to follow him as disciples who take up our own cross and trust him with our lives.Add St. Marcus as your church on the Church Center App!Fill out our online connection cardHow can we pray for you? If you’d like to leave an offering or monetary donation to our ministry please click here.
In this Ash Wednesday devotion, we encounter a woman who poured out a year's wages in perfume on Jesus. It was an act others called wasteful, but Jesus called beautiful. As we begin Lent by confronting our mortality and sin with ashes, we're reminded that though we deserve dust, Jesus paid the ultimate cost so death wouldn't get the final word—He does.Series Summary: The religious leaders at the cross hurled a challenge at Jesus: “Let this Messiah, this King of Israel, come down now from the cross, that we may see and believe.” They demanded proof before faith. But the Gospel of Mark, especially in its story of the Passion, invites us into a different reality: believing in order to see. From the anointing at Bethany to the silent emptiness of the tomb, Jesus’ journey subverts our expectations. The one hailed as king is crowned with thorns. The one with power to calm storms submits to arrest. The consistent, sure thread through the chaos is his Word. As the angel at the tomb reminded the trembling women, “He is going ahead of you…just as he told you.” As we study through Mark’s Passion, we are invited to follow Jesus—not by sight, but by faith in his sure and leading Word.Add St. Marcus as your church on the Church Center App!Fill out our online connection cardHow can we pray for you? If you’d like to leave an offering or monetary donation to our ministry please click here.
We see Jesus revealed as the Lord over chaos, the great I AM who is far more powerful than our fears. Whether he calms the storm or walks with us through it, he meets us in our weakness and shows us grace that always arrives right on time.Series Summary: Fast-paced, urgent, and relentlessly focused on Jesus, the Gospel of Mark shows us not just what Jesus said, but what he did. Written for a Roman world hungry for power, Mark introduces a surprising King - one who comes to serve, to suffer, and to give his life for many. Over the coming weeks, we’ll walk this road with Jesus, from the wilderness to the cross, discovering how the Servant-King’s actions reveal the true good news - and what it means to follow him as disciples who take up our own cross and trust him with our lives.Add St. Marcus as your church on the Church Center App!Fill out our online connection cardHow can we pray for you? If you’d like to leave an offering or monetary donation to our ministry please click here.
Jesus is rejected in his hometown—not because he lacks power, but because their hearts are closed. People's unbelief doesn't change who Jesus is. Jesus is our Savior even when he's misunderstood. Our doubts or other people’s opinions don’t cancel Jesus’ authority or compassion. God doesn’t measure you by how others respond to you. Our job is not to control outcomes; it's to trust and obey. God loves working through everyday faithfulness.Series Summary: Fast-paced, urgent, and relentlessly focused on Jesus, the Gospel of Mark shows us not just what Jesus said, but what he did. Written for a Roman world hungry for power, Mark introduces a surprising King - one who comes to serve, to suffer, and to give his life for many. Over the coming weeks, we’ll walk this road with Jesus, from the wilderness to the cross, discovering how the Servant-King’s actions reveal the true good news - and what it means to follow him as disciples who take up our own cross and trust him with our lives.Add St. Marcus as your church on the Church Center App!Fill out our online connection cardHow can we pray for you? If you’d like to leave an offering or monetary donation to our ministry please click here.
This week, we’ll study Mark 5:21-43 under the theme “Faith for Something Better.” When everything feels too late and too broken to fix, Jesus meets us in the chaos and calls us to trust him—not just for relief, but for something better.Series Summary: Fast-paced, urgent, and relentlessly focused on Jesus, the Gospel of Mark shows us not just what Jesus said, but what he did. Written for a Roman world hungry for power, Mark introduces a surprising King - one who comes to serve, to suffer, and to give his life for many. Over the coming weeks, we’ll walk this road with Jesus, from the wilderness to the cross, discovering how the Servant-King’s actions reveal the true good news - and what it means to follow him as disciples who take up our own cross and trust him with our lives.Add St. Marcus as your church on the Church Center App!Fill out our online connection cardHow can we pray for you? If you’d like to leave an offering or monetary donation to our ministry please click here.
This week, we will be studying Mark 4:1-20 under the theme “The Kingdom’s Mysterious Growth.” Jesus’ parable of the soils reveals that the real issue isn’t whether God’s Word is powerful, but whether if our hearts are truly open for it to take root, go deep, and bear fruit.Series Summary: Fast-paced, urgent, and relentlessly focused on Jesus, the Gospel of Mark shows us not just what Jesus said, but what he did. Written for a Roman world hungry for power, Mark introduces a surprising King - one who comes to serve, to suffer, and to give his life for many. Over the coming weeks, we’ll walk this road with Jesus, from the wilderness to the cross, discovering how the Servant-King’s actions reveal the true good news - and what it means to follow him as disciples who take up our own cross and trust him with our lives.Add St. Marcus as your church on the Church Center App!Fill out our online connection cardHow can we pray for you? If you’d like to leave an offering or monetary donation to our ministry please click here.
This week we will be studying Mark 2:23–3:6 under the theme “The Life-Giving Lord of the Sabbath.” In these verses, Jesus confronts not only questions about rest and obedience, but the deeper issue of who has authority over life itself. The Sabbath was given as a gift, yet it had become a burden. Jesus does not abolish God’s command; he fulfills it by restoring life and revealing himself as the One in whom true rest is found. When the Lord of the Sabbath is present, rules give way to mercy, and rest is no longer something to achieve, but something to receive.Series Summary: Fast-paced, urgent, and relentlessly focused on Jesus, the Gospel of Mark shows us not just what Jesus said, but what he did. Written for a Roman world hungry for power, Mark introduces a surprising King - one who comes to serve, to suffer, and to give his life for many. Over the coming weeks, we’ll walk this road with Jesus, from the wilderness to the cross, discovering how the Servant-King’s actions reveal the true good news - and what it means to follow him as disciples who take up our own cross and trust him with our lives.Add St. Marcus as your church on the Church Center App!Fill out our online connection cardHow can we pray for you? If you’d like to leave an offering or monetary donation to our ministry please click here.
This week we will be studying Mark 1:16-20 under the theme “Calling Disciples.” Jesus doesn’t call the qualified — he calls ordinary people in the middle of ordinary work and reshapes their lives around his Kingdom. When the King says “Follow me,” nets are dropped, priorities are reordered, and a lifelong journey of becoming “fishers of people” begins.Series Summary: Fast-paced, urgent, and relentlessly focused on Jesus, the Gospel of Mark shows us not just what Jesus said, but what he did. Written for a Roman world hungry for power, Mark introduces a surprising King - one who comes to serve, to suffer, and to give his life for many. Over the coming weeks, we’ll walk this road with Jesus, from the wilderness to the cross, discovering how the Servant-King’s actions reveal the true good news - and what it means to follow him as disciples who take up our own cross and trust him with our lives.Add St. Marcus as your church on the Church Center App!Fill out our online connection cardHow can we pray for you? If you’d like to leave an offering or monetary donation to our ministry please click here.
This week we’ll be studying Mark 1:1-8 under the theme “Good News in the Wilderness.” Mark’s Gospel opens with urgent good news: in the wilderness, God sends a messenger to prepare the way for the true King. We’ll learn that meeting our humble, powerful Savior typically occurs in the wilderness of life.Series Summary: Fast-paced, urgent, and relentlessly focused on Jesus, the Gospel of Mark shows us not just what Jesus said, but what he did. Written for a Roman world hungry for power, Mark introduces a surprising King - one who comes to serve, to suffer, and to give his life for many. Over the coming weeks, we’ll walk this road with Jesus, from the wilderness to the cross, discovering how the Servant-King’s actions reveal the true good news - and what it means to follow him as disciples who take up our own cross and trust him with our lives.Add St. Marcus as your church on the Church Center App!Fill out our online connection cardHow can we pray for you? If you’d like to leave an offering or monetary donation to our ministry please click here.
A life of readiness is not always what we think it is. During Jesus' last days, He made it clear the importance of living a life that reflected God's goodness! The Gospel Matthew explains our lives are not always being what we think they are. We find ourselves unprepared and sometimes we develop a false sense of reality. Laziness, hypocrisy, is the posture we stay in when we never were truly seeking Him! Readiness is the posture we take as we look forward to His second coming! Add St. Marcus as your church on the Church Center App!Fill out our online connection cardHow can we pray for you? If you’d like to leave an offering or monetary donation to our ministry please click here.
The true meaning of Christmas resides in the miracle of the incarnation, revealed as God making His home with us. The gifts of life, light, and grace brought by Jesus offer hope and redemption in a world filled with darkness. The Christmas story according to John celebrates the profound truth of God's love and presence.Add St. Marcus as your church on the Church Center App!Fill out our online connection cardHow can we pray for you? If you’d like to leave an offering or monetary donation to our ministry please click here.
Discover the profound connection between beloved Christmas movies and the universal longing for home, as explored through the lens of the first Christmas story. The theme of "going home" reflects our deep-seated desire for belonging and acceptance, which mirrors the journey of Mary, Joseph, and the wise men to Bethlehem, the "House of Bread." The true meaning of home dwells in Christ, where love, forgiveness, and eternal belonging await.Add St. Marcus as your church on the Church Center App!Fill out our online connection cardHow can we pray for you? If you’d like to leave an offering or monetary donation to our ministry please click here.
This week, we close out our Genesis series by studying Genesis 38:11-30 under the theme “A Mother of Jesus.” The shocking story of Judah and Tamar reminds us that, far from warm fuzzy feelings and twinkling lights, Christmas is really about how God broke through humanity’s mess into this world as a Savior.Series Summary: Our fall worship series will lead us through the Book of Genesis, arguably the most profound, insightful text in human history. Over this series, we’ll uncover how the narratives of Genesis reveal God’s design for creation, humanity, relationships, and purpose. We’ll explore truths that continue to shape our lives today, from the Garden of Eden to the promise of redemption.Add St. Marcus as your church on the Church Center App!Fill out our online connection cardHow can we pray for you? If you’d like to leave an offering or monetary donation to our ministry please click here.
This week, we will be studying Genesis 50:12-21 under the theme “How to Forgive Significant Hurt.” When Joseph’s brothers fear payback, they discover that God’s grace is far bigger than their guilt. Joseph refused to play God — and instead explained the strange, stunning way God turns harm into healing. Genuine forgiveness frees both the offended and the offender.Series Summary: Our fall worship series will lead us through the Book of Genesis, arguably the most profound, insightful text in human history. Over this series, we’ll uncover how the narratives of Genesis reveal God’s design for creation, humanity, relationships, and purpose. We’ll explore truths that continue to shape our lives today, from the Garden of Eden to the promise of redemption.Add St. Marcus as your church on the Church Center App!Fill out our online connection cardHow can we pray for you? If you’d like to leave an offering or monetary donation to our ministry please click here.
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