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Freedom Church Online

Author: Freedom Church Gallatin

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This podcast is dedicated to spreading the Word of God through the messages preached at Freedom Church in Gallatin, Tennessee.
301 Episodes
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Words That Hurt

Words That Hurt

2020-02-2439:11

Freedom Church Online with Pastor Terrell Somerville. Guest speaker Pastor Jim Wolfcale. 
Words That Help

Words That Help

2020-02-1748:41

Freedom Church Online with Pastor Terrell Somerville. 
The Power of Self Care

The Power of Self Care

2020-02-1251:32

Freedom Church Online with Pastor Terrell Somerville. 
Financial Tetris

Financial Tetris

2020-02-1249:32

Freedom Church Online with Pastor Terrell Somerville. 
Freedom Church Online with Pastor Terrell Somerville.
Freedom Church Online with Pastor Terrell Somerville
Freedom Church Online with Pastor Terrell Somerville.
He's Got the Power

He's Got the Power

2020-02-0645:36

Freedom Church Online with Pastor Terrell Somerville. 
In Part 4 of The Lord’s Prayer series, Pastor Terrell explores Jesus’ instruction to pray, “Your Kingdom come, Your will be done, on earth as it is in heaven.” While many of our prayers focus on what we want or need, Jesus teaches that prayer is ultimately about aligning our hearts with God’s purposes. Praying for God’s Kingdom means inviting His rule and priorities into every area of our lives—our relationships, decisions, and future. It shifts our focus from temporary comforts to eternal impact and reminds us that what matters to God should matter to us.The message also highlights the difference between God’s revealed will, which we discover through Scripture and obedience, and His hidden will, which unfolds in His timing even when we don’t understand it. True surrender means being willing to say, like Jesus in Gethsemane, “Not my will, but yours be done.” When we stop trying to build our own kingdom and instead trust God with our lives, we find peace, purpose, and the security of living inside the will of God.
Prayer begins with worship, not requests. When Jesus teaches us to pray "hallowed be your name," He's instructing us to honor God's holiness before asking for anything. God's name represents His character and deserves our highest reverence. We honor His name through careful speech, mindful choices about entertainment, and living as Christ-bearers in the world. Worship shifts our perspective from our problems to God's power, helping us see life correctly by seeing God properly. True prayer aligns us with God rather than trying to align God with us.
When we're in crisis, we instinctively cry out for relationship, not religion. Jesus revolutionized prayer by teaching us to address God as Father, transforming our understanding from a distant deity to an intimate, loving parent. The phrase Our Father in heaven perfectly balances intimacy with authority - God is both perfectly loving and infinitely powerful. This isn't just personal faith but family faith, reminding us we belong to God's family and don't face life's struggles alone. Understanding God as our Father changes everything about prayer, allowing us to approach Him not as beggars or orphans, but as beloved children who are already accepted and cherished.
Have you ever felt awkward praying—like you ran out of words, said the same phrase twice, or wondered if you were doing it “right”? In Part 1 of our series The Lord’s Prayer, we dive into Jesus’ words in Matthew 6 and discover that prayer isn’t a performance, a script, or a religious routine—it’s a relationship. Jesus doesn’t say if you pray, but when you pray, reminding us that prayer is expected, not optional, and that God isn’t distant—He’s Father. If you’ve struggled with inconsistency, worried instead of prayed, or felt like you failed at prayer, this message will reset your perspective and invite you back to simple, honest connection with God. Because prayer doesn’t change God—it changes you.
Many Christians struggle with an internal spiritual battle between following God and being pulled toward choices that don't align with His will. This conflict stems from false desires that take root when we fail to guard our hearts properly. According to Scripture, the heart is deceitful and can mislead us with emotions we think are from God but aren't. False desires lead us outside God's boundaries and destroy good things in our lives. However, when we live under the law of life in the Spirit rather than the law of sin and death, we experience peace, clarity of purpose, and divine guidance. Through fresh baptism in the Spirit and daily surrender, we can break free from false desires and walk in God's true desires for our lives.
The Christian life is designed to be one of continuous spiritual growth, like a wildfire that spreads when it has fuel. Many believers experience spiritual burnout when the enemy creates barriers or when internal complacency sets in. The Book of Acts reveals three essential spiritual experiences: salvation through the Holy Spirit baptizing us into Christ, water baptism as a public declaration of faith, and baptism in the Holy Spirit for receiving power. We need the Holy Spirit's power because we are leaky vessels requiring continuous filling, and this power enables effective witnessing. Spirit-filled living produces both the fruit of the Spirit and spiritual gifts for kingdom advancement. When the fire spreads, churches experience deeper worship, stronger community, and daily growth as lost people are saved.
Feeling drained, overwhelmed, or spiritually empty? In this message, Filled to Overflow, we dive into God’s design for a life empowered by the Holy Spirit—not running on yesterday’s strength, but living from continual renewal. Discover why being “filled” isn’t a one-time experience, how passion without power leads to burnout, and why God doesn’t just fill us to survive but to overflow for the sake of others. This episode invites you to stop striving, stop comparing, and stop performing—and instead come thirsty, dependent, and open to the daily infilling God promises. If you’re tired of exhaustion and ready for overflow, this message is for you.
Many people haven’t walked away from God—they’ve just been running on spiritual fumes. In this message, Fan the Flames, we’re reminded that spiritual fire doesn’t disappear overnight; it fades when it’s neglected. Drawing from Paul’s words to Timothy in 2 Timothy 1:6–7, this sermon challenges us to stir up the gifts God has already placed within us, confront the fear that smothers spiritual passion, and rediscover the power, love, and self-discipline available through the Holy Spirit. If you’re feeling spiritually dry, tired, or discouraged, this message is an invitation to stop waiting for motivation and start fanning the flame through obedience, connection, and daily faithfulness. The fire is still there—God is ready to rekindle it. 🔥
Many believers find themselves spiritually drifting despite maintaining faithful church attendance and good works. The church at Ephesus exemplified this - they were doctrinally sound and hardworking, yet Jesus said they had lost their first love. First love is passionate, grateful love that remembers what God has rescued us from. When we lose this fire, worship becomes routine, prayer becomes rare, and serving becomes obligation. Jesus provides a three-step solution: Remember where you once were with God, Repent by changing direction back to Him, and Return to the practices that once fueled your passion. Revival begins when we make the first move toward rekindling our relationship with Christ.
In this powerful vision message, Anchors & Arrows: One Church — Every Generation, we’re challenged to stop asking “What time is it?” and start asking “What am I doing with the time God has given me?” Set against a culture filled with anxiety, division, and uncertainty, this sermon calls the Church to unity across generations—honoring the Anchors, strengthening the Bridge, and aiming the Arrows with purpose. Grounded in Scripture, it reminds us that God placed us in this generation on purpose, not to panic but to shine. When generations stop competing and start connecting, the Church becomes strong, resilient, and unstoppable—one family, one mission, moving forward together in faith.
As we enter a new year, God calls us to be more than ordinary people living ordinary lives. We are citizens of heaven, placed on earth as witnesses for a divine purpose. Like Simeon, who received revelation that he would see the Messiah, we need divine revelation to reach heaven's destination and fulfill our calling. God still speaks today through prophecy that builds and encourages His people. To hear from God requires spiritual discipline and a heart of desperation, just like Anna the prophet who worshiped night and day. We must create space in our lives through prayer, Bible study, worship, and fasting to hear what heaven is proclaiming and become effective witnesses for His kingdom.
When Heaven came down, it didn’t stay silent—it spoke. In Heaven’s Declaration, part three of the Heaven Came Down series, we look at the moment Heaven announced the greatest news the world has ever heard: a Savior has been born. Walking through Luke 2:15–20, this message challenges us to respond immediately when God speaks, to stop delaying obedience, to boldly share what we’ve encountered, and to return changed through worship. The shepherds didn’t hesitate, stay silent, or leave the same—and neither should we. Heaven declared it, angels announced it, shepherds shared it, and now the question is personal: what will you do with Heaven’s declaration?
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