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Time to Repent (Part Three)
CGG Weekly by David C. GrabbeGod is always working for salvation. He creates situations and events—from smitten consciences to large-scale calamities—to lead us to the right path.
The End Is Not Yet
Sermon by Richard T. RitenbaughGod's people do a disservice to the cause of truth when they allow the media-hype to trigger a false hope about Jesus Christ's return being imminent.
Divine Warning
Commentary by John W. RitenbaughOn 9/11, the political and spiritual leadership of America absolved itself from any culpability, refusing to acknowledge our national collective sins.
September 11 One Year On
CGG Weekly by Richard T. RitenbaughAs the nation remembers the victims of terrorism, it is fitting to ask, 'Has the tragedy of September 11, 2001, changed us for the better?'

The Time of Jacob's Trouble
Sermon by David C. GrabbeThe curses of Leviticus 26 and Deuteronomy 28 are warning shots over moral decay and national sins. Jacob's trouble will force a total reliance on God.
Don't Be Indifferent
Sermon by John W. RitenbaughThe frightful Trumpet Plagues are coming on the world because of the breaking of covenants on the part of people who should have known better.
Are We Already In Captivity?
Sermon by John W. Ritenbaugh (1932-2023)Major curses, including economic oppression, famine, pestilence, mental illness, alien invasion, the scattering of modern Israel are yet to occur.
Tearing Your Clothes
Sermonette by James C. StoertzTearing one's clothes was the ancient custom (still around in some cultures) that showed great mourning and sorrow about loss or about the realization of a huge transgression. In our modern era, tearing one's clothing has lost its meaning, such as when it is used as a form of vanity like in torn clothing fashions or as a form of faux humility. We need to understand the context of how biblical characters used it to show the correct attitude towards repentance. Examples include the grief of Jacob in Genesis 37 at the loss of Joseph, and the tearing of Paul's clothes in Acts 14 when the people misunderstood the point of his message and ventured into idolatry. Now we are expected to apply the analogy to rending of the heart and striving for genuine humility at the understanding of the amount of how much God contributes compared to the small amount we do and the resulting repentance and change of behavior resulting from that realization.