Saturday, March 7, 2009

David Jeremiah Preaches on the Book of Job, Chapter 3, this evening and Sunday Morning

One of the treats of the internet is being able to listen or watch church services from literally all over the globe and from many well known speakers. One of these is David Jeremiah whose "Turning Point" show is listened to by perhaps millions daily. Jeremiah is, of course, pastor of
Shadow Mountain Community Church in suburban San Diego with the church website being

http://www.shadowmountain.org

Jeremiah, this weekend, preaches the 3rd in a series of 13 sermons on the book of Job, the earliest written book in the Bible.

Quoting Jeremiah from his weekly email:

"As we continue our study this weekend, we come to the third
chapter of the book of Job, which contains the most detailed
picture of depression found in all of the Bible. Job chapter
three records one of the Bible's longest uninterrupted speeches,
and it is the wail and cry of a man who has hit bottom. Job is
not in a recession! He is in depression!
There are many ideas floating around the evangelical church
about the nature of depression. Some actually teach and preach
that any kind of depression is the result of sin. (Actually, I
read in USA Today this morning that some types of depression are
caused by second-hand smoke!) Is it possible for a godly man or a
godly woman to experience depression and still be in God's favor?
Job Chapter three, once and for all, answers that question.
Our weekend services begin on Saturday night with "Live at
Five," and continue on Sunday morning at 9 and 10:45."


Those times are Pacific which is 3 hours earlier than Eastern. So, you can watch this evening's Saturday service from the church's website beginning at 8 pm.

The direct audio link for the services, which can be plugged into a program such as Replay AV for automatic recording for listening at your later convenience, is

http://shadowmountain.org/LiveServices.asp?mid=88&id=7195

Services run anywhere from an hour 20 minutes to an hour 40 minutes.


Archives of past services can also be found on the website.

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