Sermons
You can check out the latest sermon series or find past sermons in our library below.
SERMON SERIES
- Advent 2020: The Mothers of Jesus 4
- Advent 2023: Prepare The Way 6
- Beside Still Waters 6
- By Faith 4
- Called to Community 3
- Easter 2023 1
- Ephesians: Our Sovereign God 5
- Esther 4
- Forgiven 6
- James: The Wisdom of Faith 4
- Judges: Right In Their Own Eyes 6
- Life In Exile 9
- Mark: Who Is This Jesus? 18
- No One Can 9
- Our Lords Prayer 9
- Palm Sunday 2023 1
- Philippians: Joy In Chains 9
- Pray God Down 11
- Psalms 7
- Psalms For The Journey 5
- Return: Ezra-Nehemiah 14
- Sermon On The Mount 16
- Stand Alone Sermons 11
- The Banquet 7
- The Church 8
- The Coming King 5
- The Final Hours 5
- The Promises 52
- The Seven Deadly Sins 7
- To The One Who Conquers 8
- Worshiping the Spirit 1
DATE
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- December 2020
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- October 2019
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- March 2019
- January 2019
Abraham: God Calls
God calls Abraham out of Ur of the Chaldeans to begin a new life and journey to a land that God would show him. Abraham was the first disciple, called by God to follow and walk with him. What does Abraham’s call teach us about our own discipleship?
Babel: God Scatters
What does the story of Babel teach us about sin and how it operates? Babel is a blueprint for understanding how sin will institutionalize and organize itself into systems of corruption and rebellion against God. Babel gives us a lens to see the power structures in our world and mankind’s attempts to regain what was lost in the Garden.
The Flood: God Remakes
The Story of Noah is one we may not have thought about since childhood. Perhaps it almost feels like something more akin to the fables of Aesop or the tales of the Brothers Grimm? Let us consider together what God desires to show us through this violent but beautiful story.
Cain & Abel: God Confronts
God accepts the sacrifice of Abel, but he had no regard for Cain’s sacrifice. Why is it that God accepted one but not the other? Then when Cain murdered Abel, why was God so merciful to Cain?
The Fall: God Grieves
The fall of mankind is at the heart of what is wrong with the world and how sin fractured everything. But we also see God introduce pain into the lives of Adam and Eve in the most meaningful places of their lives. The very things they were born to do are now painful, yet this is exactly where God will meet his people throughout the rest of the Story.
Creation: God Gives Life
The story of Creation is where we see the goodness of God, his power, and the beautiful world that he created. He’s the God who brings order to the chaos. He brings for beauty and life and blesses it. Creation tips God’s hand and shows his purposes for life and blessing.
Stand Firm
We wrestle not against flesh and blood, but against principalities and powers of darkness. Often we flip this verse and operate as though our enemy is flesh and blood. When that happens we misidentify who the enemy is and grasp at earthly power instead of heavenly power. Paul teaches us to see our real enemy so that we might participate in the real war.
Perambulation
Perambulation? God is calling us to walk as children of light. The Christian faith is one that reorients the whole of our lives towards God and his kingdom purposes.
Personification
The "Old Man" vs the "New Man" is a theme that runs throughout the Paul’s writings. The old man is a slave to sin after our first father Adam. But the new man is alive in Christ and being conformed to his image. We are being transformed so that our mouth, hands, and heart personify the love of God to the world.
Participation
What is the purpose of predestination? It doesn’t mean that we sit back because whatever is supposed to happen will happen. When misunderstood it creates a spiritual apathy, but when we understand how Paul describes it then we are driven towards a fuller participation in the purposes of God in Jesus.
Predestination
What is predestination? Is God a Tyrant? Are we just puppets on a string that are forced to do whatever God wants? Doesn’t God love us and want us to love Him? When rightly understood, predestination compels us to engage in God’s mission, not neglect it. Follow us as we dive into the deep end of the pool and explore the much misunderstood doctrine of predestination.
Preparation
The second coming of Christ isn’t just an event we wait for, but something we prepare for as Christians. We are to be ready for that which will come like a thief in the night, so we should not fall asleep but remain vigilent.
Consummation
How is the second coming of Christ a comfort to Christians? Historically that was the basis of the Church’s remembrance of the second coming. It offered hope to those who recognized they lived in a broken world and that one day, all will be made new.
Transformation
In this sermon we consider the face of God and our desire for it and the transforming power of beholding it. At the Second Coming we will see Christ in his fullness, yet will are still called to seek the face of God in hope that he desires to meet with us.
Anticipation
Advent is about restoring hope. How does the second coming offer hope in a world of grief and sorrow? What keeps us from experiencing the hope that is ours in Christ? In this sermon, we see how Paul uses the reality of the second coming to offer hope to a grieving church and give us a picture of the future that awaits all believers.
Jesus Eats With Us
The Lord’s Supper is a perpetual meal that Christ gave the Church. He invites us to come and eat with him at his table. It’s a reminder that Jesus pursues us in the same way he pursued so many in the Gospel of Luke.
Jesus Ate With Repenters
Even as Christians we must continuously reconvert throughout our lives by turning away from sin and follow Jesus. The Bible calls this reconversion process repentance. The story of Zaccheaus is a beautiful picture of repentance and how we continue to answer the discipleship call.
Jesus Ate With Outsiders
At this meal Jesus ate at the house of a Pharisee and taught about the type of banquet that God throws - one that invites the outsiders. Jesus reveals how he is gathering the unwanted guests in this world for the Great Banquet of God.
Jesus Ate With Zombies
Jesus confronts the Pharisees who invited him to dinner. Why does Jesus confront them and what does it mean for us? It reminds us that Jesus came to rescue his people from corrupt shepherds and teaches us what it means to offer him what he truly desires and reject external religion.