Folgen

  • Episode 7 - Pentecost Today: Getting Close to the Holy Spirit’s Power
    Feb 27 2026

    In Episode 7 of Built for Durango, Bob and Pastor DJ stay in Acts 2 and dig into the Pentecost moment—the rushing wind, tongues of fire, and the public confusion so intense that some onlookers assumed the disciples were drunk at 9 a.m.

    But this episode isn’t a history lesson. It’s a challenge: if Acts is really “Acts of the Spirit,” what does a Spirit-empowered life look like in Durango right now?

    Bob admits the Holy Spirit has often been a blind spot—he tends to pray to Jesus and the Father, but struggles to relate to the Spirit as personal and present. DJ responds with a blunt point from Ephesians: being “filled with the Spirit” is meant to feel tangible—like surrendering control, dropping inhibitions, and stepping into faith with risk.

    From there, the conversation turns practical. DJ argues that we most often see the Spirit move when we’re beyond our capability—in desperation, dependence, and mission. They talk about what that means in a comfortable, self-sufficient town, and why proximity to suffering can become a doorway to seeing God’s power and compassion at work. DJ shares a pastoral moment praying with a dying woman and her family, and Bob reflects on a season when sponsoring Ukrainian families felt like the Spirit was moving through their church in a real, concrete way.

    The closing question is simple and uncomfortable: how do we lean into what the Holy Spirit is doing in our city today? One answer they offer: stop avoiding desperate places—step toward them, pray, and watch what God does.

    Mehr anzeigen Weniger anzeigen
    18 Min.
  • February 25, 2026 Sermon
    Feb 26 2026

    In this message from Acts 2, Pastor DJ goes back to the foundation of what the Church is actually meant to be—especially as Durango Vineyard hits the 12-year mark and asks the honest question: What are we supposed to be anyway?

    DJ argues that the foundation of the Church isn’t just a list of beliefs—it’s a kingdom culture: a people who live, act, and love with “the life of heaven” showing up on earth. Using a simple but sharp framework, he lays out the three essentials Acts 2 reveals: Holy Spirit-empowered mission, gospel transformation, and a community of belonging. Miss one, and the Church drifts—into an echo chamber, activism without inner change, or legalism without love.

    From there, the sermon moves into Pentecost: wind, fire, languages, and a crowd of nations hearing “the mighty works of God.” DJ shows that this wasn’t random religious chaos—it was God’s long-range plan, fulfilling Scripture, launching mission to the ends of the earth, and pouring His Spirit out on all people.

    The invitation is direct: the Holy Spirit isn’t given mainly to make us feel better—it’s given to empower God’s mission. And DJ closes with a clear call for the church and the listener: don’t settle for comfort or control. Say yes to the Spirit, join God’s mission, and expect more—because when the Spirit moves, everything changes.

    Mehr anzeigen Weniger anzeigen
    33 Min.
  • Episode 6: Judas and the Danger of Drifting
    Feb 19 2026

    In this episode of Built for Durango, Bob and Daniel unpack Daniel’s sermon on one of the most sobering figures in Scripture: Judas Iscariot.

    Judas didn’t fall in a single moment. His betrayal was the result of small, incremental choices — compromises that slowly pulled him away from Christ. He had proximity to Jesus, witnessed miracles, heard the teaching firsthand. But he carried a competing vision of what the Messiah should be, and when Jesus didn’t fit his expectations, Judas chose his own path.

    The conversation centers on a hard but necessary distinction: remorse is not the same as repentance. Judas felt regret. Peter also failed—but Peter turned back. Judas tried to fix things himself. Peter sought mercy.

    This episode challenges listeners to examine their own subtle compromises, hidden agendas, and attempts at self-reliance. The core message is clear: humility opens the door to grace. No matter how far we’ve drifted, forgiveness is available — but we must choose to turn toward Christ rather than manage our sin on our own.

    This is a sober conversation — but also a hopeful one. Because repentance is always just a turn away.

    Mehr anzeigen Weniger anzeigen
    20 Min.
  • February 18, 2026 Sermon
    Feb 19 2026

    The sermon explores the concept of “wasted opportunities” through the story of Judas, who, despite witnessing Jesus’ miracles, betrayed him. The focus is on the importance of belief and transformation, not just witnessing God’s work. The sermon also examines the process of choosing Judas’ replacement, Matthias, highlighting the need for self-reflection and awareness of potential pitfalls in one’s faith journey.

    The sermon explores Judas’s betrayal of Jesus, highlighting his lack of belief as the root cause. It emphasizes the importance of belief in Jesus as the only way to salvation, challenging listeners to examine their own beliefs and prioritize their faith. The sermon also addresses the cultural discomfort with the idea of Jesus as the sole path to God, urging believers to embrace this truth.

    The text explores the story of Judas and Peter, highlighting the importance of faithfulness and belief in Jesus. It emphasizes that while Judas had the opportunity to follow Jesus, he chose a path of disobedience and missed his chance. In contrast, Peter, despite his mistakes, remained faithful and ultimately became a leader of the church.

    A prayer is offered for belief and faith in Jesus, asking for guidance and forgiveness. The prayer also extends encouragement to friends to persevere in their faith.

    Mehr anzeigen Weniger anzeigen
    36 Min.
  • Episode 5: Acts of the Spirit — Why the Holy Spirit Is the Real Story
    Feb 12 2026

    In this week’s episode of Built for Durango, Bob is joined by Pastor Brian Firle for his first appearance on the podcast following his second message in our new series on the Book of Acts.

    But Brian isn’t calling it Acts of the Apostles. He’s calling it Acts of the Spirit—and that shift changes everything.

    While Acts is often remembered for its miracles, bold preaching, and explosive church growth, Brian challenges listeners to look deeper. The real driver of the early church wasn’t human courage or strategy — it was the Holy Spirit. From the resurrection of Jesus to Pentecost and beyond, Scripture makes clear that the Spirit is the animating force behind every movement of faith.

    Together, Bob and Brian unpack why this matters for us today. They explore the tension between information and transformation, Western intellectual skepticism toward the supernatural, and the hunger beneath it all for a God who is personal, relational, and near. Brian explains that the Spirit is not a fringe doctrine or mystical add-on, but the consistent way God has always worked—through power, presence, and relationship.

    The conversation moves from theology to imagination. If God truly delights in being with His people — if the Spirit is still active — what could that mean for Durango? For our church? For our families, workplaces, and daily lives?

    This episode invites listeners to recover a childlike openness to the Spirit’s movement. Not naïveté, but curiosity. Not hype, but hope. Because if Acts tells us anything, it’s...

    When the Spirit moves, everything changes.

    Mehr anzeigen Weniger anzeigen
    21 Min.
  • Episode 4 — When the Spirit Leads: Faith Beyond Strategy
    Feb 5 2026

    This week on Built for Durango, we turn the page to the Book of Acts—what Pastor Brian rightly called the Acts of the Spirit. Before there was strategy, structure, or certainty, the early church was defined by its dependence on the Holy Spirit. They didn’t move by instinct or intellect alone; they moved because the Spirit led, empowered, and transformed them.

    In this episode, Bob and Daniel reflect on Brian’s teaching and wrestle with a tension many believers feel today: the balance between understanding faith intellectually and actually living it relationally. Bob connects with the analytical grounding of Scripture, while Daniel presses into the personal, disruptive, and deeply transformative work of the Holy Spirit. Together, they ask a hard question: if the first-century church couldn’t function without the Spirit, why do we think we can?

    Daniel shares his own story of being filled with the Holy Spirit and how that moment reshaped his imagination, direction, and purpose. The conversation moves beyond theology into lived experience—boldness, joy, freedom, and a willingness to follow God beyond comfortable boundaries.

    The episode closes with prayer and an invitation. Not to learn more about the Holy Spirit, but to encounter Him. Because if Built for Durango is going to matter—if we’re going to carry God’s love into our city—it won’t happen by effort alone. It will happen when we allow the Spirit to lead, expand our vision, and move us into a deeper, more courageous faith.

    Mehr anzeigen Weniger anzeigen
    20 Min.
  • Episode 3: Reconciled — Living as God’s Ambassadors
    Jan 29 2026

    In Episode 3 of Built for Durango, DJ and Bob flip the script: DJ takes the interviewer’s seat and asks Bob to tell the story of how reconciliation has reshaped his life. Coming off DJ’s final message in his 2 Corinthians series, the conversation centers on a core gospel reality — God has reconciled us to Himself, and that reconciliation is what makes it possible for us to reconcile with others.

    DJ frames the episode around Paul’s words: “We are ambassadors for Christ.” Not polished, not perfect—often dysfunctional, like the Corinthians—but still chosen as the way God makes His appeal to the world. Bob reflects candidly on years spent in politics and public life, where truth-telling can easily turn into “take-no-prisoners” combat and reconciliation becomes optional. He explains what shifted when he moved to Durango: he didn’t stop being direct, but he rediscovered the desire — and responsibility — to leave the door open.

    From there, the conversation gets personal. Bob shares what reconciliation has looked like inside his own family, including navigating complex relationships, rebuilding trust, and the unexpected discovery — later in life — of twin daughters he didn’t know he had. The episode lands on a hard truth: reconciliation isn’t a one-time event, it’s a way of life, and it takes more than human effort. It requires the supernatural work of Jesus.

    Bob and DJ close with a clear takeaway for everyday discipleship: truth without grace isn’t reconciliation, and grace without truth isn’t lasting. Real reconciliation demands both — and it starts by being anchored in Christ’s love, forgiveness, and honesty.

    Mehr anzeigen Weniger anzeigen
    21 Min.
  • Episode 2: Staying Anchored — Avoiding Mission Drift in Life and Faith
    Jan 23 2026

    In Episode 2 of Built for Durango, Bob Bonnar and Pastor DJ Jergensen confront a quiet but persistent threat to both faith and leadership: mission drift. Whether in churches, organizations, or personal lives, they explore how it is possible to slowly lose sight of why we exist — often without realizing it.

    Using a parable about rescue stations that gradually become exclusive clubs, the conversation exposes how comfort, routine, and distraction can replace purpose. Bob and DJ challenge listeners to examine whether their faith remains outward-focused or has become inward and self-protective.

    The discussion turns to the importance of staying anchored in Christ and living with an eternal perspective. DJ offers a practical, disarming question for daily life: What would a person anchored in eternity do in this situation? He also shares insights from a 72-hour silent retreat that reshaped his understanding of peace, including the hard-earned truth that anything done in anxiety can be done better in peace.

    Grounded in the reality that nearly 70 percent of La Plata County residents are not connected to a church, the episode presses an uncomfortable but necessary question: are we still on mission, or have we settled into something safer and smaller?

    This episode calls listeners back to the anchor — God’s love and acceptance — as the source of clarity, peace, and courage to live on purpose and stay focused on what truly matters.

    Mehr anzeigen Weniger anzeigen
    18 Min.