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The Impact Church Podcast
The Impact Church Podcast
Author: Impact Church
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The Impact Church Podcast features weekend sermons from the Lowell Campus of Impact Church in Michigan. To find out more about Impact, visit our website at https://impact.church or find us on social media anywhere by searching for impactchurchhome!
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“How do you affair-proof your marriage?”It’s a question we all want a simple formula for, but the reality is much more sobering. An affair is rarely a sudden impulse; it is usually the final chapter of years of quiet neglect. Marriages don’t collapse overnight—they erode when wounds are ignored, needs are unmet, and hearts are left unattended.In today’s message, “Building A Lasting Marriage,” we look at the "Rise and Fall" of David. While we often focus on his failure with Bathsheba in 2 Samuel 11, the cracks in the foundation started a decade earlier. By looking at the volatile interaction between David and his wife Michal in 2 Samuel 6, we discover the warning signs of a marriage losing its connection.From the danger of "calcified bitterness" to the "dashboard indicator" of sarcasm, we explore how unresolved conflict creates a chasm that leaves us vulnerable. Whether you are in a season of bliss or feeling the chill of a distant spouse, this message offers a candid look at how to choose your spouse every day and protect the covenant you’ve built.In this sermon, we discuss:The Myth of the Sudden Failure: Why affairs are often the result of long-term neglect.The Michal Complex: How unresolved bitterness turns into contempt.The Sarcasm Warning: What your tone of voice says about the health of your heart.The "Homecoming" Test: What it looks like to return home to "bless your household" versus being "met with a mood."Vulnerability & Validation: The danger of seeking honor from others when you don’t feel it at home.Reflection Questions for Couples:Use these to spark a conversation on your next date night:What are some disappointments that have accumulated over time in our relationship?Does our home feel like a place of blessing or a place of "moods" and tension?How can we move from being "stiff-necked" to being tender with one another again?Scripture References:2 Samuel 6:14-23; 2 Samuel 11:1-3; Deuteronomy 17:17Website: https://impact.church Facebook: https://facebook.com/ImpactChurchHome Instagram: https://instagram.com/ImpactChurchHome YouTube: https://youtube.com/@impactchurchhome TikTok: https://tiktokcom/@impactchurchhome
This powerful message takes us on a journey through the Ark of the Covenant, revealing what happens when we approach God with enthusiasm but without reverence.We explore the tragic story of Uzzah in 2 Samuel 6, who reached out to steady the ark and died instantly—not because God is capricious, but because the Israelites had abandoned God's clear instructions about how His presence should be honored. They borrowed a 'new cart' idea from the Philistines instead of following God's original design with consecrated Levites carrying the ark on poles. This raises an uncomfortable mirror to our own lives: How often do we borrow the world's ideas and present them to God as improvements on His Word? Whether it's our views on sexuality, relationships, language, or priorities, we can fall into the trap of casual Christianity—believing in God while not actually obeying what He says. The Ark's power wasn't meant to be punitive but purposeful; when Obed-Edom honored God's presence correctly, his entire household was blessed. The message calls us back to reverence, reminding us that before we can be leaders in God's kingdom, we must first be followers. It challenges us to take six deliberate steps in our walk with God: acknowledging He is God and we are not, following rather than leading Him, trusting His ways are higher, decreasing so He can increase, obeying rather than expecting Him to obey us, and keeping Him as our only God without idols. This isn't about fear that drives us away, but reverence that draws us into the fullness of His blessing.Website: https://impact.church Facebook: https://facebook.com/ImpactChurchHome Instagram: https://instagram.com/ImpactChurchHome YouTube: https://youtube.com/@impactchurchhome TikTok: https://tiktokcom/@impactchurchhome
This powerful exploration of spiritual warfare pulls back the curtain on the invisible realm where angels and demons clash over our prayers, families, and daily battles.Through David's encounters with the Philistines in 2 Samuel 5, we discover a God who doesn't just bless our plans—He goes before us with armies of angels when we wait for His timing.The imagery is stunning: David waiting to hear the sound of marching in the poplar trees before moving forward, understanding that victory comes not from rushing ahead but from staying aligned with God's movement.We're introduced to 'Lord Sabaoth'—the God of angel armies—a name first cried out by a desperate mother named Hannah and passed down through generations.This isn't the sanitized, theoretical Christianity many of us learned in Sunday school. This is visceral, tangible faith that recognizes every prayer we utter launches spiritual warfare in the heavenly realms.When we pray, angels are dispatched. When demons resist, battles rage for days or weeks before breakthrough comes. The revelation from Daniel 10 is sobering: our prayers matter so much that they trigger cosmic conflicts we cannot see.The challenge before us is profound—are we living with what one commentator called 'a refined spirit of atheism,' believing in God intellectually while making decisions as if He doesn't exist? Or will we call on the God who mounts cherubim, rides through the heavens, and reaches down to rescue us because He delights in us?Website: https://impact.church Facebook: https://facebook.com/ImpactChurchHome Instagram: https://instagram.com/ImpactChurchHome YouTube: https://youtube.com/@impactchurchhome TikTok: https://tiktokcom/@impactchurchhome
In a world that rushes us through grief with kitschy platitudes and "get 'er done" culture, David does something shocking: He stops. He stops the nation, stops the coronation, and stops the economy to sit in the heavy, agonizing space of the soul.In this message, we dive into the "never-ness" of loss. From the heartbreak of losing a loyal family protector like Remi to the gut-wrenching grief David felt for Saul and Jonathan, we explore why 60% of the Psalms are songs of lament while 90% of our modern worship is upbeat. Is our faith big enough to hold our sorrow?Join us as we learn how to grieve well, why death feels so "unnatural," and how God meets us in the pit—not with empty explanations, but with hands that are engraved with our names.Key Takeaways:The Necessity of Lament: Why skipping the "bad feelings" short-circuits our healing and our faith.Presence over Platitudes: Why "everything happens for a reason" often hurts more than it helps, and what to do instead.Honoring the Messy: How David honored Saul’s life despite the deep wounds Saul caused him.The "Why" of Suffering: Distinguishing between the consequences of a broken world and the refining heart of God.Hope for the Hurting: The powerful imagery of a God who tattoos your name on His palm and promises to personally wipe every tear from your eye."Those who sow in tears shall reap with shouts of joy." — Psalm 126:5Website: https://impact.church Facebook: https://facebook.com/ImpactChurchHome Instagram: https://instagram.com/ImpactChurchHome YouTube: https://youtube.com/@impactchurchhome TikTok: https://tiktokcom/@impactchurchhome
What happens when you lose everything? In week two of our Rise and Fall series, we look at the life of David in 1 Samuel 30. After a devastating raid on Ziklag, David and his men find themselves at a crossroads of faith and exhaustion.When the world takes from us, our natural human instinct is toward bitterness, greed, and "keeping score." But David shows us a different way—the way of the Kingdom. Join us as we explore why Goodness is greater than Bitterness and how radical generosity can transform our lives.In this message, we discuss:The Power of Inquiry: Why asking God questions (Shaal) keeps us humble and dependent rather than fearful.Faith + Action: How David trusted God’s sovereignty while boldly pursuing the rescue mission.The Egyptian Slave: Lessons on showing care before questioning and finding heroes in unlikely places.The 200 vs. the 400: Why we should lead with "Generous Assumptions" instead of "Negative Conclusions" when others are exhausted.The Gospel Connection: How David’s decision to share the plunder with the weary foreshadows Jesus, who fought the battle we couldn't fight and gave us an inheritance we didn't earn."No, my brothers, you must not do that with what the Lord has given us... All will share alike." — 1 Samuel 30:23-24Subscribe to stay updated with our latest sermons!Website: https://impact.church Facebook: https://facebook.com/ImpactChurchHome Instagram: https://instagram.com/ImpactChurchHome YouTube: https://youtube.com/@impactchurchhome TikTok: https://tiktokcom/@impactchurchhome
We encounter David at his absolute lowest point—returning to find his city burned, his family taken captive, and his own men ready to stone him.Yet in this moment of complete devastation, Scripture records something remarkable: 'David encouraged himself in the Lord his God.' This passage from 1 Samuel 30 reveals a profound spiritual discipline that separates those who merely survive crisis from those who thrive through it. David didn't wait for external encouragement or human comfort; he spoke directly to his own soul, drawing on a wellspring of faith planted deep within him.Through examining the Psalms—David's personal journal entries—we discover his self-talk wasn't empty positive thinking but Spirit-filled truth: 'Why so downcast, O my soul? Put your hope in God.' He calmed and quieted himself like a weaned child with its mother, recalling the faith modeled by his own mother whose name remains unrecorded but whose spiritual legacy saved her son in his darkest hour. This message challenges us to examine our own inner dialogue during crisis. Are we speaking life or death to ourselves? Are we rehearsing problems or recounting God's faithfulness?The ability to encourage ourselves in the Lord—to be in the Word so deeply that we can be in the Lord during catastrophe—may be the most critical spiritual skill we can develop for the inevitable Ziglag seasons of our lives.Website: https://impact.church Facebook: https://facebook.com/ImpactChurchHome Instagram: https://instagram.com/ImpactChurchHome YouTube: https://youtube.com/@impactchurchhome TikTok: https://tiktokcom/@impactchurchhome
What if the most uncomfortable moments in our lives are actually divine appointments waiting to unfold?This message from Ryan Kresge challenges us to recognize that God doesn't just call us to gather in sanctuaries on weekends - He sends us on mission every single day into our workplaces, schools, and communities.Through a gripping roadside encounter that began with frustration and ended with life-saving intervention, we're reminded that obedience often requires us to turn around when we've already passed by an opportunity.The vision explored here centers on Colossians 4:5, urging us to 'be wise in the ways we act towards outsiders and make the most of every opportunity.' We learn that vision doesn't live on screens or in buildings - it lives in our daily schedules, our calendars, and the marketplace where we spend most of our waking hours.The radical truth presented is that we cannot follow Jesus and remain comfortable. From supporting affordable housing initiatives to mentoring vulnerable children through Kids Hope, from packing over half a million meals for Eswatini to simply showing up with kindness in our workplaces, we're called to be ambassadors who bring peace, wholeness, and completeness to broken spaces.The message is clear: freed people free people, healed people heal people, and forgiven people forgive people.Our mission field isn't somewhere distant - it's right where we are, waiting for us to look alive and notice the opportunities God places before us.Website: https://impact.churchFacebook: https://facebook.com/ImpactChurchHomeInstagram: https://instagram.com/ImpactChurchHomeYouTube: https://youtube.com/@impactchurchhome TikTok: https://tiktokcom/@impactchurchhome
As we stand at the threshold of a new year, we're challenged to examine whether we're truly growing or simply going through the motions of life.This message centers on the powerful concept of being 'resolute'—having firm determination and unwavering commitment in our spiritual walk.Drawing from 2 Chronicles 16:9, we discover that God's eyes roam throughout the earth searching for those whose hearts are fully resolved, because He wants to pour His strength into people who will actually use it.The message presents twelve biblical resolutions covering every area of life: making our homes places where God is honored, committing to consistent prayer, suffering well while remaining faithful, living free from shame, conquering fear and anxiety, caring for our bodies as temples, pursuing our spouses with renewed passion, guarding our eyes from lust, controlling our tongues, meeting the needs of others, serving in ministry, and giving generously. Each resolution is anchored in specific Scripture, reminding us that transformation doesn't happen by accident—it requires intentional resolve. The question we must ask ourselves is sobering: if someone observed our lives over many years, would they see genuine growth or simply the same patterns and limitations? God is looking for people who will be good investments, who will take His strength and multiply it for His kingdom.
What are you looking for when you look at the night sky?In this Christmas Eve message, we retraced the steps of the original "stargazers"—the Magi. These weren't just men chasing a light; they were kingmakers responding to a divine signal written in the stars.But as we discover, the same God who aligned the planets in 6 BC to announce a King is the same God speaking to us today in our driveways, through our grief, and even through a pile of wood.Join us as we explore why the "Star of Bethlehem" still matters and how "chasing the star" today leads us to a life of radical generosity and worship.In this message, we discuss:The Science and Scripture of the Star: How a rare planetary alignment in Aries signaled the birth of Jesus.The Ancient Prophecy: Why a 1,400-year-old promise in Numbers 24:17 sent the Magi on a thousand-mile journey.It’s Not Your Wood: A personal story of hearing God’s voice and learning that everything we own is actually a gift meant to be shared.Finding Jesus in the Unexpected: How following the "star" leads us to help those who are hurting—the unemployed, the grieving, and the hungry.Scripture References:- Matthew 2:1-11- Numbers 24:17Key Takeaway:Jesus was sent for you. He was born for you, lived for you, died for you, and rose again because He madly loves you. It’s not too late to chase the star tonight.Connect with Us: https://www.impact.church
The Best Gifts We’ve all experienced the joy of giving a "perfect" gift—the kind that makes the recipient light up and creates a memory that lasts a lifetime. But this Christmas, we’re looking past the wrapping paper to the gifts that truly define the season.In this message, we explore the powerful offerings made by the people at the very center of the first Christmas story. From Joseph’s quiet obedience to the Magi’s kingly treasures, each gift teaches us something profound about what it means to follow Jesus today.What Are You Giving This Year? We often focus on what we want to receive, but the Christmas story invites us to consider what we are offering to God. Are we keeping our "treasures" guarded, or are we opening them up to the King?In this sermon, we look at six specific gifts:1. The Gift of Joseph – Obedience: Doing what God commands, even when it’s difficult or doesn't make sense.2. The Gift of Mary – Available Servanthood: Giving ourselves up to God’s will, regardless of our age or status.3. The Gift of the Magi – Our Best: Opening our "treasure boxes" and offering the most valuable parts of our lives.4. The Gift of the Shepherds – Watchful Worship: Being intentional and proactive in our reverence for God.5. The Gift of the Angels – Good News: Sharing the Gospel that brings great joy to all people.6. The Gift of God – Jesus: The "indescribable gift" of salvation and "God with us."> "For it is by grace you have been saved, through faith—and this is not from yourselves, it is the gift of God—not by works, so that no one can boast." — Ephesians 2:8-9---Key Scripture Passages:Matthew 1:18-24 (Joseph’s Obedience)Luke 1:26-38 (Mary’s Servanthood)Matthew 2:1-12 (The Magi’s Treasures)Luke 2:8-15 (The Shepherds and Angels)2 Corinthians 9:15 (The Indescribable Gift)#Christmas2025 #TheBestGifts #Sermon #Jesus #Advent #ChristianLiving #Gospel #BibleStudy
🤯 What Makes You Mad? (And How to Handle It)Have you ever been so furious that you felt the need to strap on your sword and seek vengeance? Maybe not literally, but we've all been there—when fatigue, insult, and injustice collide. In this powerful message, we dive into the incredible, high-stakes story of David, Abigail, and Nabal from 1 Samuel 25 to discover the forgotten art of conflict resolution.This message is perfect for anyone navigating tension this holiday season, dealing with disrespectful people, or just trying to keep their cool when the red light turns green and the horn starts blaring!🎯 Key Takeaways in This Message:The Anatomy of Anger: We explore the breaking point of David—a moment where good is paid back with evil—and how our own hotheadedness can lead to regret.Meet the Players: Get a briefing on the three central characters: David (the Hothead), Nabal (the Fool/Hardhead), and Abigail (the Levelhead).The Fool & The Hothead: How to identify these roles in your own life and in the conflicts around you (and maybe realize which one you’ve been!).Abigail's Masterclass in Peacemaking: Discover 9 practical, step-by-step principles of de-escalating conflict that transform division into reconciliation.🔥 Abigail’s Principles for PeacemakingIn a world full of polarization and division, Abigail models what it truly means to be a "Peacemaker." You'll learn how to:Think Things Over Before You Act: The power of "On second thought..."Act Quickly, Don't Let it Fester: Why avoidance is not a strategy.Approach with Honor and Humility: Meet hurt pride with genuine respect.Acknowledge the Other Side's Experience: Validate their feelings, even if you don't agree with their actions.Tap Into Their Story: Use language that speaks to the other person's emotions, values, and relationship with God.Share the Consequences: Help the angry person see the "staggering burden of needless bloodshed" they might incur.Identify a Peace Offering: A tangible step toward reconciliation.🙏 Holiday Verse to MemorizeKeep this verse close this season as a safeguard against blow-ups:“A person’s wisdom yields patience; it is to one’s glory to overlook an offense.”— Proverbs 19:11Remember: Cooler Heads Prevail.If this message helped you, please Like this video, Subscribe for more content, and Share it with a friend who might need a reminder to pause before they react!Website: https://impact.church Facebook: https://facebook.com/ImpactChurchHome Instagram: https://instagram.com/ImpactChurchHome YouTube: https://youtube.com/@impactchurchhome TikTok: https://tiktokcom/@impactchurchhome
*👑 The Shadow King: Messy to Mighty (1 Samuel 22:1-2)*Have you ever experienced a BC (Before Catastrophe) to AD (After Destruction) moment in your life? David, the giant-slayer and rising star, certainly did. One minute he's a celebrated prince, the next he's huddled in a dusty cave, at the lowest point of his life.In this message, Ryan Kresge explores the pivotal moment in David’s story when he escapes to the Cave of Adullam—the ultimate "Borderland." It's a place of retreat, rehab, and regrouping. But it’s not just where David hides; it’s where he’s forged.*What You Will Discover:*The Meteoric Fall: How a life of rapid success can turn into a crisis of "backsliding" overnight, and why your current "sentence" doesn't define your entire story.The Geography of Faith: We trace David’s Hero’s Journey—from Bethlehem (Provision) to Gibeah (Power) to Gath (Humiliation) and, finally, to Adullam (Rehabilitation). Every location is a lesson.Messy to Mighty: Learn what happens when you’re forced to lead the most desperate, broken, and debt-ridden people you can find. David’s band of distressed, debt-ridden, and discontented men eventually became his legendary Mighty Men!Integrity in Obscurity: Discover why doing the best you can with what you have, even in the "cave" seasons of life, is the foundation for all future leadership and success.The Cave of Adullam is a crucible and an incubator. What you do here defines the rest of your life. Where are you in your journey today?📖 Scripture Focus1 Samuel 22:1-2Stay Connected!Website: https://impact.church Facebook: https://facebook.com/ImpactChurchHome Instagram: https://instagram.com/ImpactChurchHome YouTube: https://youtube.com/@impactchurchhome TikTok: https://tiktokcom/@impactchurchhome#DavidTheKing #CaveofAdullam #LeadershipDevelopment #HeroJourney #MessyToMighty #ChristianLiving #1Samuel #Sermon
How did you get here? We all have moments where we look back and wonder how a series of small, seemingly harmless choices led us to a place we never intended to be. In a culture saturated with deepfakes, fraud, and daily deceptions, is it possible that our own "little white lies" are leading us down a dangerous path?This week, our journey through the life of David takes a stunning turn. Up until now, David has been the ultimate hero - the faithful shepherd, the giant slayer, the man who trusted God. But when faced with the relentless threat of King Saul, the pressure of self-preservation causes David to compromise and manipulate the truth.In this message, Jon Bell dives into 1 Samuel 21 & 22 to unpack the moment David tells a series of fatal lies to Ahimelek the priest in the city of Nob.🔑 Key Takeaways You Will Explore:The Slippery Slope of Deception: How David’s act of self-protection (the Hebrew word Kazab) quickly spiraled, moving from "necessary lies" to full-blown pretending.The Unintended Consequences of Sin: Discover the tragic ripple effect of David's deception, which led to the death of eighty-five priests and the destruction of an entire town (1 Samuel 22).Yesterday's Filling is Not Enough: Why relying on past victories or spiritual habits isn't sufficient for today's battles, and how fear can make us abandon the power of faith.The Core Problem: The difference between abiding in God and abiding in self-preservation as our ultimate source of safety and strength.We are all like David. In moments of panic, we are tempted to manipulate circumstances for our own safety. Learn how to stop running, get honest with yourself and others, and choose to Live in Truth over living in lies.🙏 Next Steps & Discussion Questions:What are you running from right now, and where has self-preservation led you to compromise?Are there any "little white lies" in your life that need to be brought into the light and confessed?How can you actively choose to trust God's provision instead of relying on your own understanding or strength this week?
This exploration of 1 Samuel 20:30-34 by Jason Holdridge challenges us to look beyond the surface of family dysfunction and consider the hidden wounds that shape us all.We're invited into the uncomfortable space behind closed doors - where anger flares, shame is weaponized, and control becomes a desperate attempt to manage inner brokenness.The story of Saul and Jonathan reveals a profound truth: every villain has an origin story, and understanding our father's wounds is just as important as acknowledging our own father wounds.Saul began as an insecure farmhand hiding among the baggage, small in his own eyes, yet he transformed into a man hurling spears at his own son.This transformation reminds us that unhealed pain doesn't stay contained - it flows from our interactions with the world into our homes, from verbal abuse to psychological manipulation to physical violence.The message confronts us with difficult questions: Are we guarding our tongues? Are we allowing our children to ask questions? Have we moved from authority to influence as they grow?Most critically, are we taking our anger and shame to God in grief, allowing Him to father the broken places in our lives? Jonathan had the same ingredients as Saul - anger and shame - but he chose grief over retaliation, allowing God to heal rather than repeating the cycle.This is our invitation: to bring our brokenness to the altar and ask God to father us where our earthly parents could not, breaking generational patterns before they define our legacy.Website: https://impact.church Facebook: https://facebook.com/ImpactChurchHome Instagram: https://instagram.com/ImpactChurchHome YouTube: https://youtube.com/@impactchurchhome TikTok: https://tiktokcom/@impactchurchhome
This message by Jason Holdridge takes us deep into the wilderness season of David's life, exploring what it means to find ourselves with a 'target on our back.'Drawing from 1 Samuel 18-22 and the raw, honest Psalms David wrote while being hunted, we encounter a profound truth: we don't grow in success, we grow in suffering.Jason uses vivid imagery - a harp versus a spear - to illustrate toxic relationships where one person shows up with worship while another arrives with weapons.We're challenged to recognize when we're in relationships where someone is showing up with pride, jealousy, and control while we keep bringing peace and praise.The message doesn't shy away from the hard questions: How many chances do we give? When is enough actually enough? Through David's story of fleeing Saul for twelve years, we learn that God actually gives us permission to create healthy boundaries, practice 'benevolent detachment,' and sometimes make good our escape.Most importantly, we discover the gift of imprecatory prayers - those gut-level honest cries to God where we pour out our raw emotions, our confusion, our anger, and our pain.David teaches us to start with lament ('My God, why have you forsaken me?') but end with faith ('But I trust in your unfailing love'). This framework keeps us from suppressing our pain and turning into the very person we're trying to escape.It's a message about staying spiritually and emotionally healthy in the wilderness seasons, maintaining our hearts of worship even when others wield spears, and trusting that God can handle our honest questions.Website: https://impact.church Facebook: https://facebook.com/ImpactChurchHome Instagram: https://instagram.com/ImpactChurchHome YouTube: https://youtube.com/@impactchurchhome TikTok: https://tiktokcom/@impactchurchhome
This exploration of jealousy by Ryan Kresge takes us deep into 1 Samuel 18, where we witness the devastating contrast between Jonathan's covenant friendship with David and King Saul's descent into bitter jealousy.We discover that jealousy doesn't announce itself with fanfare - it begins subtly, with seeds of insecurity and comparison that quietly take root in our souls.The message reveals how Saul, despite being the honored guest at a victory celebration, became consumed by a single line in a song comparing his thousands to David's tens of thousands.What should have been a shared triumph became poison in his heart. This ancient story mirrors our modern struggles with comparison - whether it's scrolling through social media, measuring our marriages against others, watching our hunting buddy shoot bigger bucks, or even comparing ministry impact through YouTube views.The message exposes how jealousy progresses from internal resentment to external violence, opening doors to spiritual harm and eventually turning our hearts against God Himself!Yet we're not left without hope - we're given four transformative practices: cultivating generosity in our assumptions and actions, practicing gratitude when comparison tempts us, publicly celebrating those we're tempted to envy, and praying genuinely for rather than about them.The challenge is clear: jealousy rots our bones, but a heart at peace with God gives life not only to ourselves but to everyone around us.Website: https://impact.church Facebook: https://facebook.com/ImpactChurchHome Instagram: https://instagram.com/ImpactChurchHome YouTube: https://youtube.com/@impactchurchhome TikTok: https://tiktokcom/@impactchurchhome
This exploration of biblical friendship takes us deep into 1 Samuel 18:1-4, where Jonathan's soul becomes knit to David's in one of Scripture's most beautiful portraits of covenant relationship.We discover that true friendship isn't about collecting social media connections or maintaining surface-level acquaintances—it's about finding those rare souls with whom connection feels as natural as breathing.The message challenges our modern tendency to either avoid deep friendship entirely or spread ourselves so thin that we become everyone's friend and therefore nobody's true companion.Through the lens of Jonathan and David's relationship, we're invited to examine four essential elements: connection without effort, self-awareness that loves others as we love ourselves, covenant commitment that defines and protects the relationship, and humility that genuinely celebrates another's success even when it costs us something.Perhaps most striking is the reminder that Jesus himself, on the eve of his crucifixion, told his disciples he wanted to call them friends rather than servants.If Christ longs for that depth of intimacy with us, shouldn't we pursue it with one another? This isn't just about having community or fellowship—it's about fighting against the isolation that calcifies our hearts and daring to be vulnerable enough to truly know and be known.Website: https://impact.church Facebook: https://facebook.com/ImpactChurchHome Instagram: https://instagram.com/ImpactChurchHome YouTube: https://youtube.com/@impactchurchhome TikTok: https://tiktokcom/@impactchurchhome
This message by Jon Bell takes us into one of history's most iconic underdog stories—David and Goliath—and reveals that our battles aren't won through our own strength, but through whose God is our God.We're invited to examine the weapons Satan uses against us today: anxiety, depression, loneliness, addiction, marital strife, and countless other fears that leave us shattered and paralyzed.The profound truth emerges that the thing we fear is often the thing we revere—whatever terrifies us becomes what we fixate on and elevate in our lives.David's secret weapon wasn't his sling and stone; it was his unshakeable confidence in the Lord Almighty. He didn't compare himself to the giant; he compared the giant's weapons to God's power.This shifts everything for us. When we face our Goliaths, we're called not just to have mental confidence in God, but to move with courage—to run toward the battle line, not away from it. Courage by definition requires fear; we can't be courageous if we avoid what frightens us. The message culminates in a stunning call to action: faith without deeds is dead.It's not enough to know about God or believe in Him intellectually—even demons believe and shudder. We need active faith that moves us from the safety of the sidelines onto the battlefield, declaring 'this day' as our day of victory through Jesus, the ultimate rescuer who saves us from sin and death itself.Website: https://impact.church Facebook: https://facebook.com/ImpactChurchHome Instagram: https://instagram.com/ImpactChurchHome YouTube: https://youtube.com/@impactchurchhome TikTok: https://tiktokcom/@impactchurchhome
In this exploration of David's confrontation with Goliath by Jason Holdridge, we're challenged to examine our own faith and identity.The story reminds us that true confidence comes not from outward appearances or others' expectations, but from knowing who we are in God's eyes.Just as David refused Saul's armor, we're encouraged to shed the 'armor' of societal pressures and embrace our authentic selves.This message emphasizes the importance of being faithful in small, unseen moments, as these prepare us for larger challenges.The parallel between David's experiences with lions and bears and our own life struggles offers a fresh perspective on how God equips us for future battles.Ultimately, we're called to connect deeply with the 'living God,' allowing His strength and character to shape our actions and attitudes in a world that often values artificiality over authenticity.Website: https://impact.church Facebook: https://facebook.com/ImpactChurchHome Instagram: https://instagram.com/ImpactChurchHome YouTube: https://youtube.com/@impactchurchhome TikTok: https://tiktokcom/@impactchurchhome
In this message by Jason Holdridge from October 13th, we're invited to explore the story of David and Goliath through a fresh lens, focusing on the obstacles David faced before his famous battle.The central theme revolves around how seemingly small, hurtful comments from those closest to us can potentially derail our God-given destiny.We're reminded of David's encounter with his brother Eliab, who questioned his motives and belittled his presence on the battlefield.This interaction serves as a poignant example of how family members or trusted individuals can unintentionally wound us with their words.The message encourages us to recognize these 'comments that kill' in our own lives and not let them define us or limit our potential.By examining David's response - standing up for himself and turning away from negativity - we're challenged to find our voice and refuse to let others' opinions overshadow God's purpose for our lives.This teaching resonates deeply with our personal experiences, prompting us to reflect on how we've been affected by hurtful words and inspiring us to break free from their lingering impact.Website: https://impact.churchFacebook: https://facebook.com/impactchurchhomeInstagram: https://instagram.com/impactchurchhome




