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Sermon Title: “Let’s Be the They to Them”

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Text: Psalm 122:1–9

Delivered at Forward for Christ Baptist Church in Luray, VA 22835 (August 31, 2025)

Local Message Highlight
If you are searching for a Bible-preaching church near Luray, VA, this message from Psalm 122 shines a light on something simple that God uses in a powerful way: an invitation. David said, “I was glad when they said unto me, Let us go into the house of the LORD.” Sometimes all it takes is one person reaching out, showing kindness, and saying, “Come with me,” and gladness starts where discouragement used to live.

What This Sermon Covers
From Psalm 122:1–9, the message calls believers to become intentional witnesses by being the “they” to someone else. First, the sermon highlights gladness initiated, showing how an invitation to God’s house can awaken a hungry heart. Second, it emphasizes grace extended, reminding the church that people often fall out of fellowship because of sin, shame, or discouragement, and a loving invitation says, “There’s room for you, and God’s grace is still good.” Third, it points to a generating experience that happens in God’s house: gathering with God’s people and hearing God’s Word changes how we see others and moves us to “seek thy good.” The message challenges the church to stop waiting on people to come, and instead go to them, offering hope, kindness, and the Gospel. The sermon closes with a clear call for the lost to be saved and for believers to repent of silence and ask God for boldness to reach others.

Why Visit Forward for Christ Baptist Church in Luray, VA?
Forward for Christ Baptist Church is a King James Bible-believing church serving Page County and the Shenandoah Valley with clear preaching, traditional worship, and a desire to see souls saved and believers strengthened. If you want a church family that loves the house of God, believes the Gospel should go beyond the church walls, and welcomes you to grow in Christ, you are welcome here.

Questions and Answers

Quick sermon takeaways from Psalm 122:1–9, focused on inviting others, extending grace, and being “the they” to “them.”

What is the main point of the 8/31 sermon?

The message is a simple challenge from Psalm 122: “Let’s be the they to them.” David said, “I was glad when they said unto me, Let us go into the house of the LORD.” The sermon calls believers to stop waiting on people to come, and start inviting them, loving them, and bringing the Gospel to them.

What does Psalm 122:1 show about an invitation to church?

“I was glad when they said unto me…” The sermon highlights how God can use one invitation to awaken a hungry heart. Sometimes your “come with me” is the very confirmation someone has been praying for.

Why did the sermon emphasize “gladness initiated”?

The message teaches that many people are more open than we assume. When we invite them to the house of God, gladness can begin where discouragement has been living. God can use the smallest act of obedience to start something bigger than we can see.

What does “grace extended” mean in this sermon?

The sermon reminds us that people often fall out of fellowship because sin and shame convince them they are unwelcome. A loving invitation communicates grace: “God can forgive you, and there’s room for you to worship with us.”

How does church help us see people the right way?

Psalm 122 is tied to loving the house of God. The message explains that gathering with God’s people, hearing the Word, and remembering where God saved us from keeps us from looking down on others and helps us see them as souls that need Christ.

What does Psalm 122:9 mean: “Because of the house of the LORD… I will seek thy good”?

The sermon points out that time in God’s house should produce outward fruit. It should move us to seek the good of others, show kindness, and care about where people are spiritually, not just criticize where they have been.

How does this connect to the Great Commission?

The message ties “being the they to them” to going to people with the Gospel instead of waiting on them to come. Inviting, witnessing, and showing grace is part of sowing and watering, trusting God to give the increase.

Why did the sermon stress being faithful in “small things”?

The message challenges believers to stop chasing “big” moments while neglecting daily faithfulness. Reading the Bible, staying faithful to church, praying, and simply speaking to people about Jesus are small steps God uses for eternal outcomes.

What does the sermon say about offering hope to the hopeless?

The message warns that many people are carrying unseen burdens, and a simple smile, hello, or invitation may be the exact encouragement they need. Believers represent Christ in a hurting world, and kindness can open the door for truth.

What is the invitation at the end of the sermon?

The sermon calls the lost to come to Christ and be saved, and it calls believers to repent of silence and ask God for boldness. The closing challenge is practical: ask the Lord to help you be “the they” to “them” this week.

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