Sermon Illustrations about Self-centeredness
Home > Illustrations > Topics > S > Self-centeredness
Find fresh sermon illustrations on Self-centeredness to help bring your sermon to life.
Identity Defined by Kept Promises
Our culture tells us we can be real selves only if we claim our right to self-satisfaction and self-fulfillment. But a free self knows he becomes a genuine ...
[Read More]
Rock Musician Trent Reznor on Religion
In a Rolling Stone interview, Trent Reznor, the lead musician of the rock band Nine Inch Nails, muses on how his anti-religion stance helped lead him ...
[Read More]
Marilyn Manson Worships Self
Musician Marilyn Manson says:
A lot of people like to pass me off as a devil worshiper. I think that could only be true if I considered myself to be the ...
[Read More]
Function of Salt
In The Journal of Biblical Counseling, Timothy Keller makes the following observation about salt:
The job of salt is to make something taste good. I don't ...
[Read More]
Prayer Better Than Selfishness
Those people who pray know what most around them either don't know or choose to ignore: centering life in the insatiable demands of the ego is the ...
[Read More]
Prayer Frees from Self
Those people who pray know what most around them either don't know or choose to ignore: centering life in the insatiable demands of the ego is the ...
[Read More]
Scott Weiland Defines Humility
Convicted for possession of drugs, member of rock band Stone Temple Pilots, Scott Weiland talked to Rolling Stone about how being in jail impacted his ...
[Read More]
Juvenile Violence
The last few years' shootings by high school children have put a national spotlight on juvenile violence. After conducting more than 5,000 interviews ...
[Read More]
Marriage: Great Way to Die
In Holy Land: A Suburban Memoir, author D. J. Waldie observes that the biggest drawback to living alone is having nobody to forgive. It is not that you ...
[Read More]
Tainted Spirituality
When you look at our history, it is no wonder that spirituality is so often treated with suspicion, and not infrequently with outright hostility. For ...
[Read More]