OpenTools AI summary: This sermon opens with a worshipful reminder that Christianity is not just about waiting for Jesus to return, but about living as people who tell the world He is real. From there, Lomacang shifts into the theme of clouds, using a powerful driving-in-a-storm story to show how intense trials can scrub away the clutter and dust of life. He then invites listeners to rethink cloudy seasons not as interruptions, but as part of God’s way of shaping faith.
The message moves through a wide sweep of Bible passages: Noah’s flood, David in Psalm 23, the rainbow covenant, the wilderness cloud, the cross, and the Mount of Transfiguration. In each case, the cloud is not just weather—it is a sign that God is present, protecting, guiding, or preparing His people. Lomacang repeatedly emphasizes that the just live by faith, not by full visibility, and that believers should trust God’s character even when circumstances are confusing.
In the end, the sermon becomes deeply pastoral and practical. It speaks to grief, disappointment, anxiety, family pain, and spiritual confusion, while warning against complaining in ways that damage God’s character. The final call is simple and strong: when clouds come, do not stare at the clouds themselves—look for Jesus. For the preacher, the reason Jesus will return with clouds is that He has always been the God who meets His people in cloud-filled moments.