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Call On The Lord In The Day Of Trouble

Call On The Lord In The Day Of Trouble

Call on the Lord in the Day of Trouble is a pulpit-ready sermon that reminds believers where to run when life breaks hard. Psalm 50:15 gives the preacher a clear promise: call, receive deliverance, and glorify God. This message moves from worship to desperation, then from desperation to praise. It shows the church that prayer in trouble is not weakness. It is worship. It gives pastors a direct road to the altar, where hurting people can pray with faith and leave with fresh hope in Jesus.

Call on the Lord in the Day of Trouble will help pastors preach faith to wounded people. Every congregation has saints facing sickness, fear, family pain, financial pressure, or spiritual dryness. Therefore, this sermon speaks to real pews, not paper problems. It calls hearers back to heartfelt worship, not empty form. It challenges cold routine. It stirs thanksgiving. Then it points every troubled soul to the name of Jesus.

This sermon exposes the danger of having a form of godliness without power. However, it does more than rebuke. It gives hope. God does not ask for polished religion. He asks for a heart that trusts Him. When people cry, “Lord, help me,” heaven does not roll its eyes. Heaven hears worship.

Call on the Lord in the Day of Trouble also gives pastors strong preaching moments. The message presses the church to pray through, praise through, and believe through. It uses vivid stories, simple images, and altar-ready language. As a result, this sermon can help move a service from quiet agreement to real response.

Pastors can preach this message during revival, prayer emphasis, healing services, altar calls, or seasons of church burden. It fits any moment when people need fresh courage. Moreover, it gives the preacher a strong close: God said, “I will deliver thee, and thou shalt glorify me.” That promise still works today.

Call on the Lord in the Day of Trouble is more than a sermon about problems. It is a sermon about access. It teaches the church to enter His gates with thanksgiving and approach Him with faith. It reminds saints that praise belongs in every season. It also reminds sinners and backsliders that God still answers a desperate cry.

Preach Call on the Lord in the Day of Trouble when your people need to remember this truth: trouble does not get the final word. God still does.