God gave us Sabbath to restore our worship and reorient our witness
Matt Tipton Matt Tipton

God gave us Sabbath to restore our worship and reorient our witness

In week five of our Ten Commandments series, we arrive at the fourth commandment—the hinge of all God’s law: Sabbath rest. More than a rule, Sabbath is a divine rhythm woven into creation itself. Before labor began, God blessed a day of communion and delight with His people. That first Sabbath wasn’t about exhaustion, but about believing: trusting our worth to the One who made us and delighting in His presence.

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To Bear God’s Name is to Represent Him in Word, Action, and Aim
Matt Tipton Matt Tipton

To Bear God’s Name is to Represent Him in Word, Action, and Aim

In week four of our journey through the Ten Commandments, we come to a command that goes beyond mere words—it speaks to our very identity. The third commandment warns us not to treat God’s name as empty, false, or a tool for our own ends. It confronts shallow religion that honors God with lips while denying Him in life.

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The God who rescued us must be worshiped on His terms—not ours
Matt Tipton Matt Tipton

The God who rescued us must be worshiped on His terms—not ours

This weekend at Anchor Church, we examined the second commandment: “You shall not make for yourself a carved image…” Far from a rule against statues alone, it reveals how we often reshape the living God to fit our preferences or cultural trends. Before giving this command, God reminds Israel of His covenant love: “I am the LORD your God, who brought you out of the land of Egypt…” (Ex 20:2). Under the New Covenant, Jesus fulfills that rescue, revealing the Father perfectly and empowering us to worship in “spirit and truth” (John 4:24) rather than according to our own imaginations.

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Only God is Worthy of Your Worship
Matt Tipton Matt Tipton

Only God is Worthy of Your Worship

This weekend at Anchor Church, we explored the first commandment: "You shall have no other gods before me." This isn’t a cold religious rule—it’s a covenant invitation from a rescuing God. Before He gives this command, God reminds His people of their redemption: "I am the LORD your God, who brought you out of the land of Egypt, out of the house of slavery." The foundation of obedience is always grace.

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God Redeems and Then Shows Us How to Live in Freedom
Matt Tipton Matt Tipton

God Redeems and Then Shows Us How to Live in Freedom

This weekend at Anchor Church, we launched our new sermon series on the Ten Commandments by exploring the preamble. Exodus 20:1–2 begins with a declaration that reshapes how we understand the entire law: "And God spoke all these words, saying, 'I am the Lord your God, who brought you out of the land of Egypt, out of the house of slavery.'" These verses remind us that the Ten Commandments are not cold, legalistic rules. They are words of life, rooted in relationship, rescue, and revelation.

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