DiscoverChurch of the Lakes Podcast
Church of the Lakes Podcast
Claim Ownership

Church of the Lakes Podcast

Author: Oasis Faith Community

Subscribed: 4Played: 25
Share

Description

Oasis Faith Community at Church of the Lakes Global Methodist Church in Canton, Ohio. Meeting weekly at 11am.
414 Episodes
Reverse
Pastor Jared Priset: Even in our darkest moments, we have a confident and unshakable hope because of what Christ has done, is doing, and will do. Jesus is not just the bringer of hope: He is our living hope.
Pastor Bryan George: A generous spirit offers our first and our best resources while trusting that God will provide for our needs.
Pastor Jared Priset: When we follow Jesus, He redefines what can be done with little. InHis hands, our “not much” becomes more than enough. Abundant Givers givespontaneously, strategically, and sacrificially.
Pastor Jared Priset: The scarcity cycle starts in the mind, not in the wallet. Scarcity asks, “What can I afford?” Abundance asks, “What do I have?” When we trust God with what’s in our hands, He multiplies what we give away.
Pastor Bryan George: The scarcity cycle starts in the mind, not in the wallet. Scarcity asks, “Whatcan I afford?” Abundance asks, “What do I have?” When we trust God with what’sin our hands, He multiplies what we give away.
Pastor Bryan George – The Lord calls us to sow generously so that we willreap generously. When we receive gifts from the Lord, we arechallenged to save a portion for rainy days and to share a portionto help provide seeds for others.
When we put God first through tithing and generosity, He multiplies whatwe give and uses it to bless others. Pastor Jared Priset
The Christian life is not a playground, it’s a battlefield.But in Christ, we don’t fight for victory; we fight from victory.God has given us His armor, His Spirit, and His power to standfirm against the enemy.
The Christian life is not a picnic, it’s a battlefield. But in Christ, wedon’t fight for victory; we fight from victory. God has given us His armor, His Spirit,and His power to stand firm against the enemy.
Because God has adopted us as His beloved children through Christ, we are called toreflect His character in the world. To imitate God means living out of our new identity, lovingwith Christlike sacrifice, and pursuing unity as one family, so that the world sees the crossthrough us and is drawn home to Him.
You cannot sit on the fence! Put away your old self and clothe yourselves with a new Christly self. One who is made in the likeness of God in true righteousness and holiness.
In Christ, You’ve got a new identity, so stop wearing the old clothes. Take off what doesn’t fit your new life and put on the holiness that shows who you really are: someone made new by Jesus.
Because of who you are in Christ, walk in unity, use your gifts and grow into maturity, becoming more like Jesus every day
Paul shifts from teaching about the mystery of the gospel (Ephesians 3:1–13) to praying thatbelievers would experience its power personally. His prayer shows us that in Christ, wedon’t just know about God’s love in our heads – we experience it in our hearts. His lovestrengthens us in trials, surpasses all measurement, and fills us until […]
In Christ, the dividing walls between people come crashingdown. The Church is one new humanity, built together on Christ as thecornerstone.
Our testimony is this: we were dead in sin, but God made us alive in Christ. Salvation is not something we earn or achieve; it is God’s gift of grace from beginning to end. In Christ, we are raised to new life, seated with Him in victory, and sent out as His workmanship to walk […]
Paul isn’t praying that we’d get more blessing, he’s praying that our eyes would be opened to see what we already have in Christ.
In Christ, we are no longer spiritual orphans—wandering, unwanted, or unsure of who we are. God chose us before the foundation of the world, adopted us into His family, redeemed us through the blood of His Son, and sealed us with His Spirit. Our identity is not found in abandonment or uncertainty but in the […]
The life of Judas Iscariot is both a warning and an invitation. We are warned to avoid disillusionment and dishonesty, and we are invited to experience restoration when we inevitably do fail.
In the biblical narrative of James the Lesser, we come to realize that God desires faithfulness over fame. God sees us and our faithfulness matters, even when our efforts are not noticeable. churchofthelakes.org
loading
Comments