Ever Ancient, Ever New – Week 1
Summary of Sermon: Our Confession
Series: Ever Ancient, Ever New – Week 1 | Pastor Torry Sheppard
Introduction
Pastor Torry Sheppard begins Ever Ancient, Ever New by celebrating the enduring strength and beauty of the Church. Through a humorous story about a pastor describing his “multinational company” on a flight, he reframes how people perceive the Church—not as an outdated or oppressive institution, but as the greatest movement in human history. From hospitals and schools to justice and family care, the Church has shaped civilization and carried the hope of Christ for over two millennia. Despite scandals and shifting cultures, it endures—not by human strength, but because it is built on the rock of Christ Himself.
The Ache of Our Age
Acknowledging the growing cynicism toward organized religion, Pastor Torry notes that modern culture rewards criticism of the Church. While he affirms the need for accountability where there has been real harm, he also exposes the deeper spiritual current behind this distrust—a postmodern, hyper-individualistic worldview that rejects absolute truth and views authority as oppression. This isn’t new, he reminds us—it’s the same lie from Eden: “You will be like God.” In a world disoriented by self-made truth and moral relativism, people are hungry for something solid. The Church, he insists, offers that anchor: a tested, ancient, and enduring truth. Instead of apologizing for the Church to make room for Jesus, believers must recover a holy pride in her beauty, legacy, and mission.
Our Inheritance and Stewardship
The message shifts to inheritance. The faith we hold didn’t begin with us—it was handed down through apostles, martyrs, and reformers who preserved the gospel at great cost. This is our inheritance, but it also makes us stewards. We are called to guard this truth, live it out faithfully in our time, and hand it intact to the next generation. As Jude 3 says, we must “contend for the faith once entrusted to God’s holy people.” The Church doesn’t stand on shifting ideas but on eternal truths—truths that, as Augustine said, are “ever ancient, ever new.” This series, Pastor Torry explains, will reawaken pride in belonging to the Body of Christ and rekindle passion for passing the torch forward.
The Confession that Built the Church
Turning to Matthew 16:13–18, Pastor Torry examines Jesus’ question to the disciples: “Who do you say that I am?” Peter’s reply—“You are the Christ, the Son of the living God”—becomes the confession on which Jesus builds His Church. The rock is not Peter the man, but the truth he proclaimed. The Church is founded on that confession, and every believer who declares it becomes another living stone in God’s house. Confession, Pastor Torry explains, is not just intellectual agreement but heart surrender. What we confess shapes how we live. Doctrine is the foundation of discipleship and the doorway into God’s family. The early Church captured these essentials in creeds—“the theological carry-on” of the Christian faith. Pastor Torry reads the Apostles’ Creed, describing it as the timeless summary of what Christians everywhere have believed: one God, the Father Almighty; Jesus Christ, the crucified and risen Son; the Holy Spirit; the united Church; and the hope of resurrection and eternal life.
Three Reasons We Can Trust the Church
As the message closes, Pastor Torry offers three compelling reasons believers can trust the Church and its message.
The Historical Case – Christianity has withstood two thousand years of scrutiny. The manuscript evidence for Scripture is unparalleled, far exceeding that of any ancient work. The doctrines of the faith were prayerfully preserved through councils and scribes who safeguarded orthodoxy long before printing presses existed. The endurance of Scripture and doctrine testifies to divine preservation.
The Reason Case – Logic itself supports the credibility of Christianity. Considering the disciples’ testimony, one must conclude they were either lying, hallucinating, or telling the truth. Given that they gained no earthly reward and suffered martyrdom for their claims, the most reasonable conclusion is that they spoke truthfully about the risen Christ.
The Relational Case – Beyond logic and history, Christianity invites encounter. Pastor Torry shares the story of Thomas Aquinas, who ceased writing after a profound encounter with Christ, declaring that everything he had written was “straw” compared to knowing Jesus Himself. Arguments can point us to Christ, but only an encounter with His presence can anchor us in Him.
Closing Challenge
Pastor Torry concludes by reminding the church that confession and doctrine are not dry relics but living realities meant to draw us closer to Christ. The gospel we inherit is ancient and enduring, yet it remains new every time a heart confesses, “You are the Christ.” In an age of confusion, the Church must hold fast to that confession—ever ancient, ever new.