• The Body that Suffers Together | 8:18-30, 1 Corinthians 12:12-26 | Pastor Dave Hentschel
    Feb 16 2026

    In week six of Upside Down Glory, Pastor Dave Hentschel opens Romans 8 and 1 Corinthians 12 to explore what it means to be “The Body That Suffers Together.” Scripture tells us that all creation groans under the weight of the fall, and believers groan as well—not in despair, but in hope. This message reminds us that suffering is not a sign of weak faith, but a shared reality in a broken world, and that the Spirit of God intercedes for us even when we have no words left to pray. Yet God never intended His people to suffer alone. Through the image of the church as a body, Pastor Dave calls us to move beyond isolation and independence into interdependence, where every member is needed and every weakness matters. The church is not a crowd that watches suffering, but a body that absorbs it, bearing one another’s burdens with Romans 8 hope and 1 Corinthians 12 hands.

    In a groaning world, God forms a people who wait with hope, care with compassion, and refuse to let anyone suffer alone.

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    49 Min.
  • The Canvas of Glory | John 5:1-13; 9:1-7 | Pastor Bob Erbig
    51 Min.
  • The Forgotten at the Table | 2 Sam 9, Luke 14:12-14 | Pastor Dave Hentschel
    Feb 1 2026

    In week four of our Upside Down Glory series, Pastor Dave Hentschel walks through 2 Samuel 9:1–13 and Luke 14:12–14 to reveal the heart of a King who seeks out the forgotten and makes room for those the world overlooks. Through the story of Mephibosheth—crippled, exiled, and hiding in Lo Debar—Scripture shows how David’s covenant faithfulness leads him not to eliminate weakness, but to honor it with radical kindness, restoration, and a permanent seat at the royal table. Paired with Jesus’ call to invite the poor, the lame, and the blind to our banquets, this message confronts how easily dignity becomes conditional and hospitality selective. God’s Kingdom, however, is built on chesed—steadfast, covenant love—where grace is extended to those who cannot earn it, repay it, or even believe they deserve it, and where belonging comes before usefulness.

    The measure of a Christ-shaped community is not who sits at the center of the table, but whether the forgotten have been invited to it at all

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    48 Min.
  • When God Wounds Disability, Dependence, and Divine Mission | Pastor Dave Hentschel
    Jan 18 2026

    In week three of Upside Down Glory, Pastor Dave Hentschel addresses one of the most difficult and misunderstood questions Christians face: where does disability come from, and what does it mean for our faith when God does not remove weakness? Walking through Exodus 4, Genesis 32, and John 20, this message confronts the popular but unbiblical idea that “God never gives you more than you can handle,” and instead reveals a God who sometimes wounds, withholds healing, and still sends His servants on mission. From Moses’ speech impediment, to Jacob’s lifelong limp, to the resurrected Christ who still bears His scars, Scripture shows that weakness is not accidental, meaningless, or disqualifying—but often the very means through which God dismantles self-reliance and displays His glory. This sermon challenges prosperity-driven assumptions about healing, reframes disability as a place of dependence rather than failure, and calls believers to trust God’s wisdom even when strength is diminished.

    God’s Kingdom advances not through unimpaired servants, but through those who cling to Him because they cannot stand on their own.

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    43 Min.
  • Faith that Breaks the Roof | Mark 2:1-12 | Pastor Bob Erbig
    Jan 11 2026

    In week two of our Upside Down Glory series, Pastor Bob Erbig walks through Mark 2:1–12 to show how faith becomes advocacy when it refuses to accept barriers that keep people from Jesus. Centered on the story of the paralytic whose friends literally break through a roof to bring him into Christ’s presence, this message confronts a culture that quietly assigns value based on ability, productivity, and “quality of life.” From modern genetic counseling pressures to healthcare systems that ration care, the same question echoes through the centuries: who decides which lives are worthy of access, dignity, and belonging? Jesus answers that question decisively—by forgiving, healing, and publicly defending a man the world would overlook. This sermon challenges the church to recognize disability ministry as a shared responsibility, calling believers to notice barriers, carry burdens together, and actively advocate for those who are often excluded—before birth and throughout life.

    Faith that truly believes Jesus is worth reaching will do whatever it takes to take the roof off and bring others to Him.

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    50 Min.
  • God’s Strength in Our Weakness | 1 Corinthians 1:26-31; Genesis 1:26-28 | Pastor Bob Erbig
    Jan 6 2026

    In the opening message of our new series Upside Down Glory, Pastor Bob Erbig walks through 1 Corinthians 1:26–31 to confront one of the deepest assumptions of our culture: that strength is the goal and weakness is the problem. Launching in the season of New Year’s resolutions, this sermon exposes how easily we measure worth by wisdom, power, productivity, and self-sufficiency—while Scripture reveals a radically different story. Paul reminds the church that God intentionally chooses what the world calls weak, low, and overlooked to display His power and grace, leaving no room for boasting except in Christ alone. Through biblical teaching, pastoral reflection, and personal testimony, this message reframes disability, limitation, and vulnerability—not as obstacles to God’s work, but as places where His glory is most clearly seen, calling the church to honor the image of God in every person and to live fully into the upside-down values of the Kingdom.

    Our limitations are not barriers to God’s glory—they are the very stage on which His power is revealed.

    January 4th, 2026

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    41 Min.
  • The World as God Intended | Isa 65:17-25 | Pastor Dave Hentschel
    Dec 29 2025

    In the final message of our From Ruin to Redemption: The Gospel According to Isaiah series, Pastor Dave Hentschel brings us to the summit of Isaiah’s prophetic vision in Isaiah 65:17–25. This passage unveils God’s promised future—a new heavens and new earth—where sorrow, injustice, futility, and fear are no more. Isaiah is not offering speculative timelines, but reshaping our moral imagination, showing us the world as God originally intended it to be: a world marked by joy instead of weeping, security instead of loss, fruitful work instead of frustration, intimacy with God instead of distance, and peace instead of violence. This sermon challenges the assumption that brokenness is normal or permanent, reminding us that God is not patching the old order but replacing it entirely. As God’s people stand between two worlds—the one that is and the one that is coming—we are called to live now as citizens of that future kingdom, allowing God’s promised world to shape our faith, ethics, hope, and daily lives.


    God’s promised future is not an excuse to wait—it is a summons to live now in the joy, justice, and peace of the world He is bringing.

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    53 Min.
  • From Silence to Song
    Dec 28 2025

    In this Christmas Eve message from our From Ruin to Redemption: The Gospel According to Isaiah series, Pastor Bob Erbig walks through Isaiah 62:1–5 to address the tension many of us feel during the holidays—why life often feels heavier than the picture we present to the world. Isaiah speaks to people who appear faithful on the outside but feel forgotten, weary, or desolate on the inside, and announces the good news of Christmas: God has broken the silence. Through the birth of Jesus Christ, God steps into real darkness, gives His people a new name, and declares His delight over them. This message reminds us that Christmas is not about curated images or perfect lives, but about a God who enters our brokenness, speaks hope into silence, and invites us into a restored relationship through His Son.

    Christmas is not proof that life is perfect—it is proof that God has come near, broken the silence, and given us hope in the darkness.

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    28 Min.