Weekly Content
How Do We Hold Onto Hope When God Feels Silent?
Advent has always been a season of waiting — but not the soft, cozy waiting our culture often imagines. Biblical waiting was gritty. It was centuries of longing, aching, praying, and holding onto hope when everything around seemed to point in the opposite direction. And if there’s anything this week’s message reminded us of, it’s that the tension between God’s promise and our timeline is where real hope is forged.
What Kind of Legacy Will Your Generosity Leave?
Every believer leaves a legacy. The question is not if—it’s what kind. For followers of Jesus, the legacy that lasts is one built on grace, generosity, and the glory of God.
Is Money Your Master—or Your Servant? How to Put God First in Your Finances
Everyone is mastering something: a trade, an instrument, a craft. But the hard truth is that while we try to master things, some things quietly start mastering us. The Bible warns that money is a powerful tool—but a terrible master. Jesus said plainly: “You cannot serve both God and money.” (Matthew 6:24)
How do believers move money from the throne back to the toolbox?
When It’s Dark, God Still Works the Night Shift
Everyone has moments that feel like night — the kind of darkness that leaves you disoriented, anxious, or unsure where to turn. Scripture reminds us that even in those moments, God is still at work. He’s not asleep. He’s not distant. He’s watching and working in the dark.
How to Carry God’s Presence Beyond Sunday
We all know what it’s like to walk into a room and feel it — tension, joy, heaviness, peace. Atmospheres are real. They can either shape us or be shaped by us.
Scripture teaches that praise is not just an emotional response to good circumstances; it’s a spiritual weapon that changes the atmosphere. When we praise, we’re not ignoring reality — we’re inviting God to redefine it.
How Praise Changes What’s Real: Becoming a Thermostat, Not a Thermometer
We all know what it’s like to walk into a room and feel it — tension, joy, heaviness, peace. Atmospheres are real. They can either shape us or be shaped by us.
Scripture teaches that praise is not just an emotional response to good circumstances; it’s a spiritual weapon that changes the atmosphere. When we praise, we’re not ignoring reality — we’re inviting God to redefine it.
How Thanksgiving Defeats Entitlement
Thanksgiving is more than a meal or a long weekend. It’s an act of spiritual warfare. In a world where comparison and resentment come easily, giving thanks re-anchors our hearts in the truth that God is still good, still gracious, and still worthy of praise.
Is Community the Missing Piece in Your Faith?
Some things look fine on the surface but fail under pressure. A cookie can be picture-perfect and taste wrong if a tiny ingredient is off. A rocket can launch with fanfare and still break apart because one small seal failed. In the Christian life, that “missing O-ring” is often community: the practiced, committed life with a smaller group of believers who know your story and carry it with you.
Is God’s Pressure Really His Provision?
Most of us avoid pressure. We treat it like an enemy—something to escape, medicate, or fight off. But what if pressure is not always punishment? What if, in some cases, it’s actually God’s provision?
That’s exactly what Jonah discovered.
What Happens When We Stop Running From God?
Running away is something we learn young—whether it’s avoiding chores, dodging responsibility, or turning away from difficult conversations. But Scripture reminds us that the greatest thing we often run from is God’s call on our lives.
Can One Encounter with Jesus Really Change Everything?
Some people think transformation is gradual—slow steps toward becoming a better version of ourselves. But the Bible reminds us that true transformation often happens in a single encounter with Jesus.
What Happens When You Say Yes to the Holy Spirit?
Life rarely goes according to plan. Sometimes God interrupts our carefully laid-out paths with unexpected timing, unexpected places, or even unexpected people. And that’s exactly what Acts 8 shows us through the story of Philip.
How the Holy Spirit Turns Hardship Into Hope
Life doesn’t always go the way we expect. Sometimes it feels like everything is falling apart—plans crumble, suffering hits, and we wonder where God is in the middle of it. But the book of Acts reminds us that what looks like defeat in our eyes can actually be the beginning of something greater in God’s plan.
Why Does the Church Hurt Sometimes—and How Can the Holy Spirit Heal It?
Every believer has likely experienced both the beauty and the brokenness of church life. There are the mountaintop moments—powerful worship, answered prayers, lives transformed. But there are also the valleys—disappointment, misunderstanding, even deep hurt within the very place meant to bring healing.
This tension isn’t new. In Acts 6:1–7, the early church faced its own painful challenge: widows were being overlooked in the daily distribution of food. What could have become a divisive fracture instead became a Spirit-filled turning point. The apostles sought God’s wisdom, chose leaders “full of the Spirit and wisdom” (Acts 6:3), and the result was striking: unity, growth, and care for every person.
The Secret to Staying Spiritually Alive
Everyone walks through seasons when life feels barren—when prayers seem unanswered, joy feels out of reach, and hope starts to fade. The Bible doesn’t hide this reality. In fact, Jeremiah 17 describes it perfectly: drought and heat will come. The question is—will you wither, or will you stay alive and fruitful even in the harshest conditions?