Behold, I Am Doing a New Thing: Fresh Mercy for a New Year
Isaiah 43:18-19 • Lamentations 3:22-23
New beginnings, God's faithfulness, leaving the past behind
Forget the Former Things: Permission to Leave Last Year Behind
The Windshield and the Rearview Mirror
There is a reason the windshield is bigger than the rearview mirror. You are meant to spend more time looking at where you are going than where you have been. A driver who stares into the rearview mirror will crash. A life that stares into the past will stall. The rearview mirror exists so you can glance — learn, remember, be grateful — and then look forward. God designed the new year as a windshield moment: eyes ahead, hands on the wheel, trusting that the road He has prepared is better than the road you have left behind.
Source: Driving metaphor
See, I Am Doing a New Thing: Learning to Spot What God Is Up To
Great Is Thy Faithfulness: The Mercy That Renews Every Morning
Applications
- 1Identify one thing from last year that you need to release. Write it down, pray over it, and let it go. God is doing a new thing — but you have to let go of the old thing to receive it.
- 2Instead of a resolution list, try a single daily practice: every morning, thank God for one new mercy. That practice will outlast any resolution.
- 3Look for the stream in the wasteland. This week, ask God to show you where He is already at work in the area of your life that feels driest.
- 4Release the pressure of perfection. You do not need to be a new person by January 31. You need to show up every morning and receive the mercy that is new for that day.
Prayer Suggestions
- Lord, we lay down last year — its failures, its regrets, its unfulfilled hopes. We trust You to do a new thing in us and through us.
- Open our eyes to perceive what You are doing. You are making streams in our wastelands and ways in our wildernesses — help us see them.
- Thank You for mercies that are new every morning. We do not need enough strength for 365 days. We need enough grace for today.
- Great is Your faithfulness. Yesterday, today, and tomorrow. We step into this new year not in our strength but in Your mercy. Amen.
Preaching Toolkit
Finding Nemo (2003)
Dory's advice to Marlin — 'Just keep swimming' — sounds trivial, but it contains a profound truth: when you do not know where you are going, the most faithful thing you can do is keep moving forward. God does not promise a map for the new year. He promises a way through the wilderness. And a way is discovered by walking, not by standing still and demanding a GPS route. 'I am making a way in the wilderness' is God's version of 'Just keep swimming' — not aimless motion, but faithful forward movement, trusting that the God who is making the path is also lighting the next step.
3 Voices
Powered by LensLines™ — one-liners from every TheoLens™ tradition
The windshield is bigger than the rearview mirror for a reason. Glance back. Stare forward. God's new thing is ahead, not behind.
You do not need enough willpower for 365 days. You need enough grace for today. And tomorrow, the mercy will be new again.
Lamentations — the most devastated book in the Bible — contains the most hopeful verse. The deepest mercy comes from the deepest bottom.
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Frequently Asked Questions
When should I preach a New Year's sermon?
Most pastors preach it on the first Sunday of January (or the Sunday closest to January 1). Some preach it on New Year's Eve if their church has a watch night service. This template works for either.
How do I make a New Year's sermon different from a motivational speech?
Root it in Scripture, not self-improvement. This template anchors new beginnings in God's initiative ('I am doing a new thing') rather than human effort ('Try harder'). The emphasis is on receiving daily mercy, not achieving annual goals.
Should I address New Year's resolutions?
Briefly — most people relate to the resolution cycle. This template reframes resolutions as a daily practice (receiving new mercy each morning) rather than an annual willpower challenge. That's more sustainable and more theological.
This Sermon in Your Tradition
A new year's sermon sounds different depending on your theological tradition. See all 17 versions.