Home | About Us | Past Featured Subjects | Bulletins | Sermons & Audio | Studies In The Cross Of Christ | Classes | Questions

 

Click Here for the Latest Edition of the Charlottesville Beacon

 

Email Newsletter icon, E-mail Newsletter icon, Email List icon, E-mail List icon Sign up for our Email Newsletter

Sermons Preached in Harrisonburg, VA

Receiving Forgiveness (4) by Larry Rouse
Outline
PowerPoint

Audio

What is God's Forgiveness Like? (2) by Larry Rouse
Outline
PowerPoint

Audio

Instrumental Music and the Cross of Christ
 by Larry Rouse
Outline
PowerPoint

Audio

Where Are the Dead
by Larry Rouse
Outline
Audio

The Foundation of Forgiveness (1)
by Larry Rouse
Outline
PowerPoint

Audio

For Harrisonburg Schedule and Directions Click Here

Sermons Preached in Williamsburg, VA

In Search of the Servant of God (Part 1) by Larry Rouse
Outline
PowerPoint

Audio

For Williamsburg Schedule and Directions Click Here

Psalms, Hymns and Spiritual Songs

New Hymns, Sermons, Articles


Planning to Visit Us?

What to Expect
Current Class Information


Thoughts To Ponder

The highest reward
for man's toil is not what he gets for it,
but what he
becomes by it.



You will need
the following viewers
to view many of the
files on this site.

 

Get Adobe Reader

Click here to
download
Adobe Acrobat Reader

Click here to
download
Microsoft PowerPoint Viewer


 

Assembly Times

 Sunday

   Bible Classes (10:00 am)

   AM Worship (11:00 am)

 

 Wednesday

   Bible Classes (7:00 pm)

 

Location

180 Townwood Drive

Charlottesville, VA 22901


Click Here for Specific Directions

Contact Us

(434) 632-7603

Directly e-mail us at:

larryrouse@cvillechurch.com

or

preacher@cvillechurch.com

 


 

 

 

 

The Last Fight

By Robert F. Turner

On the ruins of a theater in Ephesus there is a memorial to an athlete of the 2nd century A.D. which reads: "He fought three fights, and twice was crowned."

Watch out for that last step! You see, those "athletes" fought to the death. A man's last fight was always fatal.

So, the crown meant only that one changed opponents; and sooner or later the last would slay him. What a difference in this crown, and that of the apostle Paul:

"I have fought a good fight, I have finished my course, I have kept the faith: Henceforth there is laid up for me a crown of righteousness, which the Lord, the righteous judge, shall give me at that day..." (II Timothy 4:7-8).

Paul did more than fight "unto death" -- he fought unto life, eternal. If his fight of faith cost him his earthly life, it only meant he was now free to claim the crown that counted most (Revelation 2:10, II Cor. 5:6ff.). How different from those who die without hope.

Paul sought an enduring victory -- one that could not be taken from him. He exhorted Timothy, "Lay hold on eternal life..." (I Timothy 6:12). This called for training, perseverance, and above all, self control (I Corinthians 9:24-27). The athlete trained his body only to prolong the day when it would fail him; but Paul trained his that it might the better serve the Lord, and thus serve his eternal purposes.

We are all engaged in some sort of battle, and in a very real sense it is "unto death." The fatalist, the fool, resigns himself to shortchange. Though he fights 3,000 times, he can expect but 2,999 temporal crowns, not one of which he can take with him beyond that last fight. The futility of it all is enough to make a man throw in the towel.

The Faith gives purpose to life. The Christian fights, hard and often. But he has submitted himself to God's will, "strives lawfully" (II Timothy 2:5), and his fight is never in vain. Jesus Christ has provided for him a crown and not for him only, "but unto all them also that love his appearing."

 

 
 
© 2009 - North Charlottesville church of Christ - All rights reserved!