Nigel Barham has compiled a list of what he believes are some of the best sermons available online.
He has categorized them by Bible Teaching, Missions, Thinking, Evangelism, Revival & Prayer.
While they may not all appeal to you, it will certainly give you a starting point for some great listening.
He has also has a interesting new post on ideas for prayer.
Nigel also runs “Bookling”, quite possibly the cheapest place to buy Christian and other books online.
Finally, I love the imagery he used in a sermon to describe Paul’s final words to the Colossians, I have reproduced it below.
“I, Paul, write this greeting in my own hand.” As Paul ended his letter to the Colossians, the shackles around his wrists clattered. He stopped and looked at them, as he had done so many times before. Then, he raised his pen again. “Remember my chains,” he added – three words to remind the believers of their need to suffer for Christ, and of his need for their prayers. He put his pen down. In the darkness of his prison cell all was quiet. Paul looked at his chains again, and he was reminded of the One for whom he bore them. He thought of his Saviour, and of his Saviour’s suffering: the thorns, the nails, the cross. A tear trickled down his cheek as he remembered how his Lord had shown indescribable mercy to him—Saul, now Paul—on the Damascus road. Then, sitting with his back pressed against the cold prison wall and his face buried in his hands, the man began to weep. ‘Thank you, thank you… thank you,’ he whispered. Joy, thankfulness, a sense of eternity, and sheer love for his Lord welled up within him. Paul lifted his pen one last time. He would end not with his name, nor with the reminder of his chains, but with a word that represented the core of his message, the passion of his life, and the very essence of his God. “Grace,” he wrote. “Grace be with you.”
