All posts by Sean Scribner

About Sean Scribner

Pastor Sean is the Lead Pastor at EMC. He and his wife Rebecca have three children: Savannah, Nathan, and William.

It is Finished!

When Jesus had tasted it, he said, ‘It is finished!’ Then he bowed his head and gave up his spirit. -John 19:30 (NLT)

My father was the toughest man I’ve ever known. Not stern or hard to get to know or unloving. On the contrary, dad wore his heart on his sleeve, had a tender heart, and was always loving and affectionate. But dad had a threshold for pain that I will never understand. The guy was as tough as nails. No one could take a baseball bat to the chin (there were many baseball injuries), a knee to the thigh (there were many wrestling injuries), or a tablesaw to the hand (there were many construction injuries) like he could.

Dad was also a fighter. He fought through years of diabetes, heart attacks, a stroke, botched back surgeries, and ultimately liver failure in a way that defies logic. In his final days, dad held onto life longer than anyone could have ever imagined, surviving conditions to which most healthy people would have easily succumbed. The sheer grit and will of John Scribner in his final days in this world was a marvel to behold.

But in a distinct point in time, he died. In one moment he was alive; in the next moment he was not. I watched it happen. I’ll never forget that moment as long as I live.

He Died a Real Death

As unique as the story about my father’s life may be, the truth is there was nothing unique about his death. It was quite ordinary. So ordinary, in fact, you could say he died the same death we all die. Here one moment; gone the next. In an instant. Whether one suffers from a terminal disease for years or dies suddenly in a car accident, the death of one is the same as the other. Death is death.

In this regard, the death of Jesus Christ was no different. It was a normal human death. It was real. There was a specific moment in time where he was alive and then in the next his spirit departed from his body, just like with dad and just like (someday) you and me.

In all the ways that pertain to our salvation, Jesus Christ was both utterly unique and at the same time utterly ordinary.

If this were not true, it could not be argued he was fully human. As Gregory of Nyssa once said, “He who decided to share our humanity had to experience all that belongs to our nature.”

Human life is encompassed between a definite start and end. If he had experienced one without the other, he would have only half fulfilled his purpose.

His Redeeming Work Was Complete

It would be a mistake to think that when Christ said, “It is finished,” he only meant his earthly life. Yes, it meant that, but so much more. It meant the very purpose and mission for which he had come into the world, including all prophecy pointing toward this moment, had been completed.

What began in his baptism had come to its conclusion: His redeeming work for humanity.

In the words of Martin Luther:

By the departing word, ‘It is finished,’ Christ indicates that all scripture is fulfilled. He says in effect: World and devil have done as much to me as they were able to do, and I have suffered as much as was necessary for the salvation of men…and no one need argue something still remains to be fulfilled.

As Jesus, the spotless lamb of God, gave up his life for the sins of the world, his saving work was complete. On his cross, the saving act had decisively occurred. It was objectively done. It required no further sacrificial work on the part of the crucified Lord. The ransom for sin had been paid. The penalty for sin had been endured. The divine-human enmity was at an end. Redemption was sufficiently and perfectly accomplished.

It is forever finished.

He Saves to the Uttermost

Because his work on the cross is complete, you and I can be completely saved. In an instant. Right now!

For God made Christ, who never sinned, to be the offering for our sin, so that we could be made right with God through Christ. -2 Cor. 5:21 (NLT)

The complete work of Jesus means you and I can be reconciled to God. Where once there was hostility, now there is peace. What Jesus accomplished objectively on a Roman cross 2,000 years ago for all humanity is subjectively available to you and me by faith in this moment. Nothing more needs to be done. We need only believe and receive.

But our High Priest offered himself to God as a single sacrifice for sins, good for all time. -Hebrews 10:12 (NLT)

He saves to the uttermost. The words of Gregory of Nazianzus, “A few drops of blood recreate the whole world,” echo in those of Luther, “The person is eternal and infinite, and even one little drop of his blood would have been enough to save the entire world,” and they can be experienced by you.

I invite you to let the him recreate you. Resolve now to trust in his sacrifice on your behalf and in your place. May it be said of your faith in his saving work, “It is finished.”

The Touchable Savior

War. Disease. Destruction.

Heartache. Misery. Suffering.

Our world is broken. Anyone who has ever lived has suffered. Those who suffer inevitably ask the question: “Does God care?”

To answer this question, Jesus came. Forget the depictions of him as stoic or indifferent. He stepped fully into this world and he touched it, but he was also touched by it.

In “The Touchable Savior” we will follow Jesus throughout the second half of the Gospel of Mark on his journey to the cross. We’ll discover just how far he was willing to go – just how much he was willing to be touched – in order to bring healing and salvation to our broken world.

Series Playlist

Elizabeth City EMC Podcast
Elizabeth City EMC Podcast
The Two Touches
Loading
/
  • The Two Touches

    The Two Touches

    Feb 18, 2018 • 31:19

    Two touches. Two rebukes. Two crosses. Speaker: Sean Scribner Series: The Touchable Savior Scripture: Mark 8:22-26

  • Who's in the Club?

    Who's in the Club?

    Feb 24, 2018 • 32:30

    It’s not who you think, nor is it how you think. Speaker: Sean Scribner Series: The Touchable Savior Scripture: Mark 10:13-16

  • So Close, Yet So Far Away

    So Close, Yet So Far Away

    Mar 4, 2018 • 36:40

    Is there anything you are unwilling to leave behind to follow Jesus? That thing has to go. Speaker: Sean Scribner Series: The Touchable Savior Scripture: Mark 10:17-27

  • My Cup, Your Cup

    My Cup, Your Cup

    Mar 11, 2018 • 40:42

    The journey to the cross is designed to locate us through disorienting us. We are only ever able to find who we really are as we allow ourselves to get lost in him. Speaker: Sean Scribner Series: The Touchable Savior Scripture: Mark 10:32-45

  • Touched by Extravagant Love

    Touched by Extravagant Love

    Mar 18, 2018 • 34:50

    A life of consequence is not one that is defined by mistakes, but by the grace of God in Christ. Speaker: Sean Scribner Series: The Touchable Savior Scripture: Mark 14:1-9

  • The Kiss of Betrayal

    The Kiss of Betrayal

    Mar 25, 2018 • 35:32

    Jesus Christ – the Light of the world and revelation of God – the one in whom heaven and earth have forever come together – was pressed that you and I might have joy. Speaker: Sean Scribner Series: The Touchable Savior Scripture: Mark 14:43-52

  • Touching Life

    Touching Life

    Apr 1, 2018 • 34:49

    What compels someone to leave family and home and travel to a foreign land to faithfully preach a message that gets you killed…unless it was true? Speaker: Sean Scribner Series: The Touchable Savior Scripture: John 20:24-29

  • The Last Word

    The Last Word

    Apr 1, 2018 • 21:51

    2018 Easter Sunrise service. Speaker: Aaron Meservey Series: The Touchable Savior Scripture: I Corinthians 15:53-58

The Untouchables

A leper. A cripple. A sinner. A man possessed by devils. A bleeding woman. A dead girl. All persons whose paths crossed Jesus. All broken. All dirty. By the standards of ordinary people, all untouchable.

But Jesus is no ordinary person.

The Son of God came into the world to touch it. To transform it. To make all things new. He wasn’t disgusted by our “stuff.” He didn’t avoid it, instead he touched it and made it clean.

This collection of sermons from the gospel of Mark are about those who needed a touch the most – those who were avoided, were reviled, who were written off by the world. But Jesus reached out to them and changed their lives forever, something he’s still in the business of doing today.

“Jesus reached out and touched him.” (Mark 1:41)

Series Playlist

Elizabeth City EMC Podcast
Elizabeth City EMC Podcast
A Scandalous Touch
Loading
/
  • A Scandalous Touch

    A Scandalous Touch

    Jan 7, 2018 • 38:40

    The Son of God came into the world to touch it. To transform it. To make all things new. Speaker: Sean Scribner Series: The Untouchables Scripture: Mark 1:40-45

  • Standing Room Only

    Standing Room Only

    Jan 14, 2018 • 34:52

    An Inaccessible Savior The Needs of the Needy Speaker: Aaron Meservey Series: The Untouchables Scripture: Mark 2:1-12

  • Following This Savior

    Following This Savior

    Jan 21, 2018 • 42:11

    The invitation to follow The dangers of following The benefits that follow Speaker: Sean Scribner Series: The Untouchables Scripture: Mark 2:13-17 Audio Player

  • No Matter How Dirty

    No Matter How Dirty

    Jan 28, 2018 • 44:13

    Jesus meets us where we are Jesus doesn’t leave us like we were Jesus sends us where we need to be Speaker: Sean Scribner Series: The Untouchables Scripture: Mark 5:1-20

  • The Only Real Option

    The Only Real Option

    Feb 4, 2018 • 33:37

    The exhaustion of all options The bridge between despair and hope The lavish gift of life Speaker: Sean Scribner Series: The Untouchables Scripture: Mark 5:21-43

  • Opened to All of Him

    Opened to All of Him

    Feb 11, 2018 • 32:50

    The uniqueness of His touch The sufficiency of His touch The freedom of His touch Speaker: Sean Scribner Series: The Untouchables Scripture: Mark 7:31-37

Expecting Christmas

There’s something special about the season of Advent. It’s a season of preparation, a season of waiting. It’s the time of the year where we begin to prepare ourselves to celebrate the coming of the Lord. It’s a season that is pregnant with promise. Promise for hope. Promise for peace. For love and for joy. For God to make things new once more. And so we wait.

The Bible encourages us to “wait upon the Lord.” This is a special kind of waiting. It means “waiting with hope,” not “wait and see what happens.” It is not just the passing of time. It is anticipation. We have God’s promises to anticipate. He cares for us. His plans are good, not evil, toward us. We can trust Him. He keeps His promises.

Christmas declares “God always keeps his promises.” In His way, in His time. He asks us to wait…with hope. He promises to return. He promises to come into our heart. He promises us pleasant surprises.

“You will conceive and give birth to a son, and you will name him Jesus. He will be very great and will be called the Son of the Most High. The Lord God will give him the throne of his ancestor David. And he will reign over Israel forever; his Kingdom will never end!” (Luke 1:31-33)

Series Playlist

Elizabeth City EMC Podcast
Elizabeth City EMC Podcast
Waiting
Loading
/
  • Waiting

    Waiting

    Dec 3, 2017 • 36:08

    A people who wait The God who comes Speaker: Sean Scribner Series: Expecting Christmas Scripture: Luke 1

  • Searching

    Searching

    Dec 10, 2017 • 21:47

    Speaker: Sean Scribner Series: Expecting Christmas Scripture: Luke 2:8-20

  • Seeing

    Seeing

    Dec 17, 2017 • 35:22

    Just as he promised The face of salvation A light to the nations Speaker: Sean Scribner Series: Expecting Christmas Scripture: Luke 2:25-32

  • "Peace, Peace" When There Is No Peace

    "Peace, Peace" When There Is No Peace

    Dec 24, 2017 • 30:34

    Speaker: Aaron Meservey Series: Expecting Christmas Scripture: Matt 2:1-12,16