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Spiritual Renaissance “The Creation of Adam”: The Touch of God
Michelangelo’s The Creation of Adam is a visual lens for a foundational biblical truth: God is the initiator who moves toward humanity first. Drawing from Scripture and art, this message highlights the “gap” between God’s outstretched hand and Adam’s relaxed posture as a symbol of invitation rather than coercion. God is near enough to be chosen, yet far enough that your response is real. The story of God is one of God’s faithful pursuit, even when we wander or hide…
Thessalonians, Pt 1: Your Future Forms You
As Christians, our behavior flows from our beliefs, and what we believe about the future shapes how we live in the present. Writing to a persecuted church, Paul doesn’t issue disconnected rules about sex, money and work, and death. Instead, he reframes reality through the lens of sanctification, faithful presence, and resurrection hope. Believers are already set apart by God, not through compliance but by grace, and are then formed to live like people who belong. Because heaven is our…
Thessalonians, Pt 1: Love Enough to Worry
Paul’s worry for the Thessalonian believers led him to loving, courageous action instead of withdrawal. Just as a parent’s concern motivates them to search for a missing child, Paul’s love compelled him to send Timothy to check in on a young, persecuted church. The message of Jesus reminds us that God did not remain distant from us in our brokenness but acted in love by sending Jesus. Because God loves us up close, we are invited to let our worry…
Thessalonians, Pt 1: Live Worthy of Your Calling
In the uncertain times that the Thessalonian believers were experiencing, Paul knew that ultimately, the word of God was strong enough to hold them. And in the uncertain times that you’re living through right now, it’s crucial that you know that, too. That Christ is your foundation.
Thessalonians, Pt1: Someone’s Watching You
For better or worse, we are often the version of Christianity others experience. Paul’s encouragement to the Thessalonian church highlights not what they believed, but what their beliefs produced: faith that worked, love that labored, and hope that endured under pressure. Rooted in grace rather than performance, their lives reflected what God had already done in them, drawing others toward Jesus even in the midst of persecution. The message challenges us to consider how our lives represent Christ today –…
Self Insufficient: The Freedom of Dependance
We confront the deeply ingrained belief that the goal of life, and even faith, is to not need anyone. Even God. But Jesus and Scripture paint a very different picture: freedom isn’t found in independence from God but in dependence on him. Being rooted in God and others allow us to experience true freedom in harmony with God and others.
You Can’t Do It Alone
Do you ever feel like you have to be self-managed? When faith is carried alone, spiritual drift can happen to any of us. Through the authors of Scripture, God assumes community, shared responsibility, ongoing presence, and relational depth as essential for faith to survive. While community is risky and people will fail us, isolation is an even greater danger. Following the example of Jesus, who invited others into his deepest moment of weakness, we are called to refuse spiritual anonymity…
Self InSufficient: When Strong Isn’t Enough
In a culture that worships self-sufficiency, strength has become its own religion with its own creed, practice, and promise. But Scripture shows a radically different reality: God’s power is most visible in our weakness. Using Paul’s “thorn in the flesh” from 2 Corinthians 12, this message reminds us that weakness is not sin, failure, or irresponsibility – it is our humanity. It is the place where God’s grace meets us. Instead of hiding our limitations, burdens, and dependence, we are…
Self Insufficient: The Myth of Self-Sufficiency
In a world that celebrates independence as strength, what if needing others isn’t a sign of weakness but wisdom? The opening message of this series challenges one of our culture’s deepest lies: that we can hold life together on our own. Scripture reminds us that we were never meant to be self-sufficient. We were made to be God-dependent and people-connected.