Below are additional resources of videos, links, tools, and expanded notes to supplement the sermon
preached by Rob Blair at Harbour Shores Church on May 24th, 2026

God’s Work in the Individual and in the World

 Mark 4:26-34 contains not one, but two parables: The Growing Seed & The Mustard Seed.

Both of these parables teach vital truths about how Jesus grows and expands His kingdom—His way. This message is deeply countercultural in a world that says, “Be true to yourself” and “You can change the world!”
while also challenging aspects of the modern church-growth/planting movement which often seeks to build and expand God’s kingdom through man-made methods using corporate marketing strategies, business vision casting, and sheer human effort.

Jesus desires to accomplish in, and through us, and the entire world something which only God can do.

“The kingdom of God is as if a man should scatter seed on the ground. He sleeps and rises night and day, and the seed sprouts and grows; he knows not how.”Mark 4:26-27
 

“For when one says, ‘I follow Paul,’ and another, ‘I follow Apollos,’ are you not being merely human? What then is Apollos? What is Paul? Servants through whom you believed, as the Lord assigned to each. I planted, Apollos watered, but God gave the growth. So neither he who plants nor he who waters is anything, but only God who gives the growth.” – 1 Cor. 3:4-7

Currently, we are in high school & college graduation season. As a result, we are also bombarded with self-actualization speeches to “believe in your dreams”, and “what this world needs most, is you to be you!”  casting every graduate as the main character of their one story. One such famous speech was delivered by Apple’s CEO, Steve Jobs to the 2005 Stanford graduates. He gets a few things right, but in the end, the best he can offer is the ever popular, “follow your heart”.

To counter the endless parade of banal inspirational messages, Mike Rowe offered his best advice to graduates everywhere in his wonderfully, humorous way, and that is, DON’T follow your passion. (Along the same lines of  homespun, common-sense wisdom is Paul Harvey’s famous, “So God Made A Farmer”.)

Year’s ago, when our youngest son was graduating for high school, the commencement speaker that day was history teacher, speaker, author, and podcast host, Peter Heck. Peter didn’t give the typical “follow your dreams” message. Instead, he offered genuine, counter-culture, biblical wisdom.

Peter’s most recent book “REBELLIOUS; What If Christians Were Actually Different?” will help combat the self-defining cultural landslide in which we are currently being swept away.

Dr. David Schrock  shares leadership insights for those seeking to serve God in advancing His kingdom. David shares (at the 28 min. mark) wise counsel he once received as a pastoral candidate, to embrace obscurity so as to avoid the pitfall of what is labeled main character syndrome. by Alex Kocman; ABWE’s Dir. of Communications and podcast host.

At the center of main character syndrome is the same lie the devil used to tempt Adam & Eve we read about in Genesis chapter 3, which was to determine for themselves what is right & wrong. In other words, you can be your own god. Humanist philosophy calls this self-actualization.

Listen to this podcast  by Jonny Ardavanis interviewing Melissa Dougherty on how self-actualization has made it’s way into the modern western church in the old lie, just new packaging of new thought Christianity. 

Christ’s Etceteras

Christ’s Etceteras is a fiery 1915 missionary manifesto and booklet by famed English cricketer and missionary C. T. Studd. It calls believers to reject earthly comfort and become fully devoted “nobodies” in the militant cause of evangelizing the world and crowning Jesus Christ as King.

Studd used the term to define a new type of radical, unashamed missionary who is completely sold out to God without reservation. The core ideas and principles outlined in the booklet include:

  • The Definition of an “Etcetera”: Studd described Christ’s Etceteras as those who recognize others as “Regulars” while viewing themselves as “Nobodies.” They exist solely to execute the “Etcetera’s work” of spreading the Gospel to the unreached.
  • Rejection of Worldly Gain: The text condemns living for luxury, fame, or ease. Studd urged Christians to abandon self-interest, noting that Christ lived poor, suffered shame, and made Himself of no reputation.
  • An International Brotherhood: He envisioned these missionaries as an international brotherhood and sisterhood—an “army of the Living God” operating without earthly salaries or guarantees of material support.
  • The Heart of a Hero: Studd called for the restoration of “heroism” in Christianity, explicitly demanding that believers stop making excuses, quit consulting flesh and blood, and become militant gamblers for Christ.
 
The booklet served as a founding document and rallying cry for the missionary agency he was establishing. To dig deeper into his original writings, you can read the full text via Wholesome Words.