Church

Find a sermon associated with this topic below.

The sermon emphasizes the call to an everlasting preoccupation with God, urging believers to move beyond a superficial relationship with Him and to truly understand and embrace His grace. It highlights the transformative power of Jesus' call, as seen in the story of Levi, and challenges listeners to surrender fully to God's lordship, recognizing that true joy and purpose come from following Him wholeheartedly.

Pastor Jim uses Jeremiah 6:16 and 1 Corinthians 12:12-27 to stress that true Christian living involves more than just belief—it requires active participation as a member of the church. He argues that membership is a call to unity, diversity, and mutual responsibility, where each person's unique gifts are vital for the health and mission of the entire body of Christ.

Pastor Ryan's sermon, drawing from 1 Peter, stresses that Christians are called to be living stones, built together as God's temple. He encourages believers to actively be the church by serving one another and glorifying Jesus in all aspects of life, as true faith cannot be lived in isolation.

The sermon explains that God's design for marriage is based on covenant rather than feelings - while human thinking believes love leads to covenant, God's truth is that covenant leads to deep, lasting love. The marriage covenant provides safety that enables honesty, confession, repentance and healing, ultimately reflecting God's covenant relationship with believers.

The sermon explores Jesus's redefinition of family from the cross, emphasizing a new spiritual family, "Family 2.0," that transcends cultural and biological ties, rooted in Jesus's words and forgiveness. It invites believers to embrace this new family identity, free from guilt and shame, and to welcome others into the body of Christ through baptism.

This sermon reveals that the ultimate mission of the church is not to build a lasting institution but to advance God's eternal kingdom by making gospel-centered disciples who live on mission. By rejecting a consumeristic faith and embracing a sacrificial lifestyle, believers are equipped to be a transforming presence in their communities, reflecting the church's true purpose of participating in God's redemptive work.

Based on the parables of Luke 15, Pastor Ryan calls the church to relentlessly pursue those who are lost because every individual is precious to God. It affirms that God uses ordinary people, living out the transformative power of the gospel, to reach those He loves.

This sermon teaches that many marriages feel stuck because they've forgotten God as their Creator and foundation. True freedom and joy in marriage are found not in fixing our spouse or ourselves, but in continually centering our relationship on the love of Jesus Christ.

This sermon teaches that our pervasive loneliness is a sign that we were created for deep, God-centered community, not for a superficial and individualistic culture. True freedom from loneliness is found in the church, a community that welcomes people without audition and lives out the love of Christ.