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Worship is one of the natural things human beings do, but right worship is one of the most challenging things we’ll ever do. Why is that? Because right worship comes about through revelation. Listen and discover why the second command is so helpful.Exodus 20:1-4
You can hang a sign on a wall, but you cannot force a heart to love. We live in a world that feels like it has too many laws, yet we never seem to have enough to fix the human condition. What are we to do? Join us for our Lenten Series on the Ten Commandments.Exodus 1:1-3
As Jesus prepares His disciples for a hostile world, He introduces the Holy Spirit with a singular, radical purpose: to give the Church Access. Discover how the Spirit ensures we can truly know and possess God in this life. Jesus desires for you to have access—come find your seat at the table.John 15:18-27
One of the key doctrines of the Christian faith is that this world is not Home. But if this world isn’t your home, then what is? Is there a place that you’re made for? In John's gospel, Jesus gives us great insight into who and what we were made for in order to live here and now with great love and hope.
Having reflected, in December, on Isaiah’s imagery of a shoot (a tendrel, a vine, growing out of a stump, we now turn to the life of Christ at work in the lives of New Yorkers. This series ministers to our hearts while addressing our hopes for 2026, by reminding us of our unique mission as a local church in NYC: to be a community that abides in the Vine for the sake of the city.
Having reflected on Isaiah’s imagery of a shoot growing out of a stump, we now turn to the life of Christ at work in the lives of New Yorkers. This short series will minister to the hopes and expectations we have for ourselves in 2026, as we’re reminded of our own unique mission as a local church in NYC.
To walk by the Spirit is to walk in conflict, and because of that, in life there is the good, the bad, the ugly, and the hope.
The passage from Isaiah 11 is not a parable, but it is a metaphor from human history that touches on themes similar to Shell Silverstein's, The Giving Tree. But unlike the Silverstein poem, the promise of Isaiah 11 is that one day, because of the cross of Jesus Christ, man will be united to God and to one another, and the peace of the Lord will permeate all of Creation.
In this message, Sean Davis explores the profound themes of hope, the person of hope, and the security of that hope as presented in Isaiah 9:2-7. He emphasizes the historical context of Isaiah's prophecy, the significance of the birth of Christ, and the eternal nature of His kingdom. The message invites listeners to reflect on their own longings and the hope found in Jesus, the child born to bring light into darkness.
If Christ has done everything, why is the Christian life still so difficult? The Apostle Paul teaches the Galatians the difference between spiritual freedom and slavery, and the power to transform self-centered love outward towards others.
What if the core issue of spiritual burnout isn't what you do, but a fundamental misunderstanding of who you are? What if the anxiety you carry comes from living like a hired hand, desperately working for a status you actually inherited? Paul shows us that when the fullness of time came, God sent His Son to redeem us so we could receive adoption into God’s family. We're grateful to have Rev. Dr. Irwyn Ince teach us from Galatians 4:1-7;5:1.
Christian holiness is not a self-help program, but a life-long reaction to God’s finished work.
This morning, we are opening up the book of Galatians to begin a new series on Spiritual Renewal. In the best of circumstances, we pray, we serve, we read the Bible, yet we feel deflated. Our inner life lacks power, our church life often lacks grace, wisdom, and it’s way too easy to fall into cultural cliques or judgmental attitudes. Why does this happen? Theologian Richard Lovelace, argues that the loss of vitality—the lack of continuous renewal—is rooted in a subtle form of unbelief.
In a city filled with coaches and counselors, 360 reviews, and personality assessment tests, NYers could make the case, and often do, that we’re incredibly self-aware. But the truth is we’re prodigies when it comes to self-deception. Supplication is that aspect of prayer where the person praying entrusts God with his circumstances and his entire self.
Are you attitudinally grateful? King David is... and its from this place that he entrusts God to deal with two things he cannot control on his own; his character and his enemies.
If you’re a Christian, confession is never about your condemnation, it’s always about your coming of age. Through confession, David is inviting God to shape him into the person God’s already declared David to be.
Great writers Now, writers are known to have a "love/hate" relationship to their craft, but they’re dependent on writing to know themselves. Christians, have a similar relationship to prayer, its hard, but we’re dependent on prayer because it's in and through prayer where experience both awe and intimacy with God, and you come to know your self.
This week, we end our series on the parables of Jesus. Listen in as our Pastoral Resident Sean Davis unpacks the greatest invitation. How would you respond?
This week we learn from guest preacher, Steve Ko, as we reflect on Psalm 41.
Today we have a parable that starts out laughable but turns deadly serious. Jesus teaches us that if you don’t have a relationship with God based on forgiveness, which inclines you toward forgiveness and reconciliation when the opportunity present itself than you might not have the relationship with God you think you do.




