Deceit sermon ideas

Deceit is the deliberate misleading of another by concealing, distorting, or contradicting the truth. In sermon and in prayer, we can lament the pain and harm caused by human deceit, and call for truthfulness. 

What does the Bible say about deceit?

Sermon ideas about deceit 

Intent to mislead 

Sermons about deceit can show that the heart of deceit is an intent to mislead — through words, actions, gestures, silence, the lift of eyebrows to feign surprise, and much else. Now, it is possible to mislead innocently; I may mislead you with a falsehood that I mistakenly believe. But deceit requires cunning and craft. The deceiver means to fool, to trick, to dupe, to con — note how many synonyms we have for deceit. 

Deceit is the first form of evil Adam and Eve encounter in the Garden of Eden. It is also one of Satan's titles: the father of lies (John 8:44). It despoils justice in the gate (Amos 5:10) or, as we would say, in court. And in religious people, it curdles into hypocrisy, the sin Jesus is so hard on.  

A damaging evil 

Sermons about deceit can also highlight the threat of deceitful religion, which mutates into a self-serving substitute for the service of God. People use religion to get rich or to get happy or to appear righteous. Believers are entirely capable of using mutant religion to conceal the character of God and actually to oppose the project of God in the world. This is why the Bible condemns deceit as a dangerous and damaging evil. 

This is a hard message for the preacher to bring in an age of hucksterism, spin, hype, and baloney. Misleading ads, pants-on-fire politicians, TV shows that are full of spin, online discussion threads spewing wild accusations — all these things and many more can harm or even corrupt human life, aborting trust and the fellowship that depends on it. Deceit also dehumanizes our neighbor, whom the deceiver regards as unworthy of the truth. Deceit in modern life is so common, so familiar that it breeds cynicism in the hard-hearted and despair in the soft-hearted. 

But while it is familiar, deceit is not normal — not what God wants for human life. So both Ephesians 4 and Colossians 3 treat deceit as part of the old life that has to die with Jesus Christ, and they treat truthfulness as part of the new life gained by rising with Jesus Christ. Christ himself appears among us "full of grace and truth" (John 1:14). In the body of Christ's followers, truth-telling is a ligament, binding us to Christ and to each other. 

Excerpts about deceit 

Following are sample excerpts from Zeteosearch.org sermon resources about deceit: 

"In any time, in any place where the faithful face wickedness, bloodshed, and deceit, the words of Psalm 139 provide comforting assurance of God's sovereign creation of, and care for, each person." Sermon Preparation by Nancy L. deClaisse-Walford from Working Preacher  

Worship ideas about deceit 

Following are sample excerpts from Zeteosearch.org worship resources about deceit: 

"Liberate us from the guile which leads us to doubt their sight, and free us from deceit so that we may be witnesses of you, who lives and reigns with the Father and the Holy Spirit, one God, world without end. Amen." Prayer by Joshua Bode from Reformed Journal

"God of Perfection, you call us to be honest in all we say and do; but instead, we tell lies that hurt our neighbors. Forgive our deceitful ways, and teach us to speak the truth in love." Prayer of Confession by Amy Livng from Re-Worship  

 

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