• Wonder - Week 4 | Grace
    Jan 25 2026
    There’s a quiet, persistent tension many carry: am I good enough to be welcome with God, or is my life a ledger of mistakes that tips one way or the other? This message names that fear head-on—how people try to balance a scale of good deeds against guilt, and how that worry steals peace, hope, and confidence about what comes next. The talk untangles mercy, justice, and grace with plain stories—a traffic stop, a paid-for breakfast, and the image of a debt stamped “paid in full”—to show grace not as a reward for trying harder but as an undeserved, generous gift that changes everything. Listeners are invited to shift from performance to gratitude, to breathe into a freedom that’s already been purchased for them, and to stand in a new state of being rather than a constant state of earning. Listen for the simple moment that reframes what “it is finished” really means.
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    35 Min.
  • Wonder - Week 3 | Delight
    Jan 18 2026
    Watching people who seem selfish, loud, and successful get ahead while quiet, generous people struggle can leave you exhausted, angry, and half convinced something is broken beyond repair. This message names that sting—envy, worry loops at 2 a.m., and the temptation to fight fire with fire—and names the temptation to let those things become the center of your life. Instead of a pep talk, the sermon zeroes in on one surprising move: stop fretting and learn to “delight” in a different focus. It shows how shifting what you treasure reshapes your actions, steadies your nights, and reconnects you to a God who delights in you. Listen for practical ways delight reorders priorities, undoes corrosive anger, and produces a quieter kind of strength that outlasts flash-in-the-pan success.
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    42 Min.
  • Wonder - Week 2 | Rejoice
    Jan 11 2026
    Foreign experts following a bright star meet a city that’s unsettled and a religion that won’t leave the temple — a tension between human cleverness and the strange, small place where God shows up. This sermon digs into the awkwardness of the Magi: esteemed astrologers who are led to a poor home in Bethlehem while Jerusalem stays safely at home. It names the modern parallel — we still look for meaning in power, prestige, and polished answers, and miss the surprising places where life truly changes. The message traces three threads: the gifts and limits of human wisdom, the need for revelation that flips our assumptions, and the way wonder moves into worship. Expect clear, grounding reflections that make humility feel like an opening, not a defeat, and an honest invitation to be unsettled and grateful. Hear how a newborn’s obscurity rewrites what really matters and stirs a joy worth seeking.
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    41 Min.
  • Wonder - Week 1 | Wonder
    Jan 4 2026
    The world hums with busyness, endless scrolling, and the steady flattening of wonder — so how do we recover a sense of awe when life feels like noise and our days blur into to-do lists? This message traces that tension from late-night screens to the forgotten habit of marveling at the stars, our hands, and the fact that we exist at all. It points to Psalm 8 as a counterpoint to cynicism and cultural distraction, naming the loss of reverence that leaves many feeling small and adrift. The sermon reframes who we are by holding up three lenses from the psalm: the majesty of God, the marvel of human dignity, and the miracle of how God works through weakness — even a newborn in a manger — to renew creation. Expect gentle provocation more than tidy answers: an invitation to stop, look up, and let something bigger reshape how you measure value, purpose, and power, leaving you quietly wondering what might happen if awe returned to your days.
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    35 Min.
  • Woven - Week 4 | The Thread Continues
    Dec 28 2025
    The new year can feel like a thin veil: holiday warmth and hopeful resolutions that quickly fray when old habits, anxiety, or guilt return. If you’re tired of feel-good pep talks that don’t stick, or you’ve wrestled with the gap between wanting to change and feeling stuck, this message meets that precise tension. It names the fatigue of trying harder and the quieter ache of needing something deeper than motivation. Using the moment when Simeon and Anna recognize the infant Jesus at the temple, the sermon shows how God’s presence threads into real life — revealing what’s hidden, allowing necessary ruin so resurrection can begin, and coming alongside to free and comfort the bound. It’s not about moral pep rallies but about a stubborn, historical hope that enters our mess. Expect clear, honest teaching that points to unexpected grace and leaves you wondering where that thread might lead in your own ordinary story.
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    29 Min.
  • Woven | Christmas Eve 2025
    Dec 24 2025
    The holidays can feel strange when the lights, trees, and Santa-sized rituals crowd out the very thing they're supposed to celebrate — and for many, Christmas surfaces grief, isolation, or a sense that meaning has been manufactured. This message confronts that tension head-on: why do our traditions sometimes miss the point, and what difference does it make that “the Word became flesh”? The preacher leans on the Woven theme, images of careful hand-weaving, and John’s startling opening line to name the discomfort and the disconnect of modern Christmas. Instead of dismissing our customs, the talk reframes Christmas as God weaving himself into our world and into our lives: fully human, fully present, wounded alongside us. From that truth flow three practical consequences — deep comfort in suffering, a renewed impulse to serve others, and a steady hope that endures. Hear how the Incarnation tugs at daily choices and reshapes what we celebrate this season, leaving you with a different kind of Christmas thread to follow.
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    32 Min.
  • Long-Expected Hope
    Dec 21 2025
    The holidays can feel like a sprint of obligation: buying the right gifts, keeping up appearances, and sometimes sinking into debt just to prove love. That pressure squeezes out the quieter longing many of us carry—real hope, rest, and a sense that life could actually be whole. This message names that tension and refuses the “must perform” script so many of us inherit. Rather than another list of things to do, the sermon walks through the old Advent rhythm—four candles that name hope, peace, joy, and love—and translates them into plain, practical shifts: a confident definition of hope (not wishful thinking), choosing peace as the sign God is present, practicing gratitude to invite lasting joy, and learning to abide in love so your heart can finally rest. It’s not about more effort; it’s about receiving what’s already offered and then giving it away—an invitation that lingers after the lights go down.
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    36 Min.
  • Woven – Week 3 | The Thread Of Trust
    Dec 14 2025
    A young, unmarried woman gets an angelic announcement and then is left alone to face shame, confusion, and danger — a picture that mirrors how many of us feel when life hands grief, doubt, or the risk of loving someone anyway. If you’ve hesitated to trust because relationships bring hurt, or wondered where God is in the messy parts of life, this message names that blunt tension: God doesn’t keep his distance when things are fragile. The sermon traces a “thread of trust” woven through Scripture: the most high becoming a vulnerable child, God choosing weakness instead of safety, and the hope that our lives are being knitted into something greater. It moves beyond tidy answers and offers a patient, honest invitation to let trust be an act — not a feeling — even when the angel doesn’t stick around. Hear how that strange, risky form of love begins to change what faith looks like for real life.
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    38 Min.