Given by Mark Whynaucht
Christ’s letter to Ephesus gives us four powerful takeaways. 1) Encouragement. Christ sees faithfulness. He sees endurance. He sees those who labor for His name and refuse to compromise truth. 2) Warning. It is possible to be doctrinally correct, morally conservative, and hardworking—yet still lose our first love. And that loss matters deeply to Christ. 3) Instruction. We are called to remember, repent, and return—to rek...
Given by Doug Johnson
There is a definite pattern of repetition in the annual observances God commands for His people. We repeat the pattern every year, no matter how many times we’ve done it before. If we talk about people repeating things over and over, we might say they’re being “redundant.” Yet God use that very pattern to help us. How can we make th...
Given by David Treybig, Sr.
This message explores marriage as God designed it from the beginning, starting in Genesis. Scripture shows marriage as both a human relationship and as a physical picture of something spiritual. Through passages from the Law, the Prophets, and the New Testament, the message examines how marriage reflects God’s relationship with His people. It also considers love as an intentional choice e...
Given by Chuck Sinon
God uses His faithful servants to carry on His work. Servants who were faithful to the end. In whom, God's Spirit has not faded over time, and whose legacy we can continue to carry until the work is done.
Given by Mark Whynaucht
These letters are Christ’s blueprint for preparing His people for the final moments before His return. They are His spiritual diagnosis of the Church that will face the end of the age. And they are His personal invitation to walk faithfully with Him, to overcome, and to inherit all things.
Given by Ken Giese
According to Webster’s Online Dictionary, exceptionalism is defined as being “different from the norm.” But what makes America exceptional and what role did the faithfulness of Abraham and God’s covenant with him play in the establishment of a great nation and a great company of nations that are “different from the norm”? To quote Abraham Lincoln: “We have been the recipients ...
Given by Chris Moen
We've all heard the phrase, "timing is everything," but we should rephrase it to be "God's timing is everything." God works on kairos time, not chronos time. He is not slow in His promises. The test for every Christian is to remain faithful and believe that God will keep His promises, with the knowledge and confidence...