Sermon Library
Free sermon series for churches: outlines, video, and full teaching from Luis Burgos. Available in English, Spanish, and bilingual.
6 sermons found

Prayers That Moved Mountains
Midnight in the Prison
Paul and Silas had been beaten, shackled, and thrown into the deepest part of the prison. At midnight, instead of groaning, they began to sing. This message is for everyone who finds themselves in a dark place they did not choose — and calls them to the kind of praise that opens prison doors.

SHIFT
The Harvest Is Plentiful
Jesus looked at the crowds and was moved with compassion. He saw them as sheep without a shepherd — harassed and helpless. His response was not a program or a strategy. It was a prayer request. This message confronts the church's tendency to see the harvest as a burden and calls us back to the compassion that moves heaven.

Prayers That Moved Mountains
When You Don't Know What to Do
A great army is coming. The king has no battle plan. His only move is to seek God. This message explores Jehoshaphat's desperate, honest prayer — and what God does when His people admit they have no strength but set their eyes on Him.

Prayers That Moved Mountains
The Sound of Abundance of Rain
Three years of drought. One prophet on his face on Carmel. Seven trips to check the horizon. This is what persistent, faith-filled prayer looks like — not a one-time request but a posture of expectation. Elijah heard the sound of rain before a single cloud appeared. What are you hearing before it comes?

SHIFT
Rise and Run
Elisha had one request: a double portion of Elijah's spirit. But receiving the mantle required staying close when others walked away. This message unpacks the transfer of anointing from one generation to the next and calls the church to the kind of stubborn pursuit that refuses to let the fire pass by.

SHIFT
Consider Your Ways
The people of God had been busy building their own houses while the house of God lay in ruins. God's word through Haggai is uncomfortably direct: 'Consider your ways.' This sermon calls the church to examine where we have let spiritual priorities slip while personal comfort increased, and issues a fresh call to build what matters.
