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Author: Liberti Camp Hill Podcast

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Liberti Church seeks to Live, Speak, & Serve as the very presence of Jesus in Camp Hill. Please join us here for sermons from our weekly worship gatherings. Visit www.liberticamphill.org for more information.
786 Episodes
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10 - Do Not Lose Heart - Gospel Servants - 03-15-2026 by Liberti Camp Hill Podcast
In this episode of the Sermon B-Side Podcast, Jenna Wright and Matt Looloian continue the conversation from this week’s sermon on 2 Corinthians 3:7-18. They explore the greater glory of the new covenant, how Christ fulfills the law, and what it means to live with confidence in the gospel.
In 2 Corinthians 3:7–18, the Apostle Paul contrasts the old covenant with the new covenant fulfilled in Jesus Christ. While the old covenant revealed God’s law and exposed our insufficiency, the new covenant brings righteousness, freedom, and transformation through the Holy Spirit. Because of Christ’s finished work, believers now approach God with confidence, share the gospel boldly, and are continually transformed from one degree of glory to another.
Jenna and Pastor Matt go deeper into 2 Corinthians 2:14–3:6, discussing the paradox of feeling insufficient while trusting that our sufficiency comes from God. What does it mean to be the aroma of Christ and live as gospel servants in everyday life? Scripture: 2 Corinthians 2:14–3:6
Feel insufficient? Good. The gospel servant was never meant to run on their own strength. Let the weight of the calling overwhelm you—so you can finally receive the sufficiency of Christ. You are not enough. He is. Listen in and step into the strength that was always His.
07B - The Guide for Gospel Health - B-Side - 02.23.26 by Liberti Camp Hill Podcast
In 2 Corinthians 2:1–11, we see that a church is only as healthy as its relationships. Paul shows us three essentials for gospel health: cultivating refining personal relationships, understanding the loving purpose of church discipline, and displaying the power of forgiveness. When we confront sin with love, pursue repentance, and extend forgiveness as those who have been forgiven in Christ, we protect the unity and witness of the church. Forgiven people forgive people - and that’s how the gospel shapes a healthy church.
06B - Integrity - B-Side - 2.16.26 by Liberti Camp Hill Podcast
In a world facing a crisis of integrity, this sermon from 2 Corinthians 1 reminds us that God is always faithful. Because all of God’s promises find their “yes” in Jesus, we are called to live with integrity - individually and together as the church.
Welcome back to a new season of the Sermon Bside Podcast, a podcast of Liberti Church. In this episode, host Jenna Wright sits down with Pastor Matt Looloian to kick off our study of 2 Corinthians—exploring why this letter matters now, how affliction and comfort shape the Christian life, and how prayer anchors us in every season. Listen in as we reflect on Sunday’s sermon, preview Bible studies, and answer a listener question on trusting God in both suffering and abundance.
God Will Give You More Than You Can Handle In this opening message from 2 Corinthians, we confront familiar Christian clichés and discover a deeper gospel truth: God often allows more than we can handle so that we learn to rely fully on Him. Through affliction, God reveals Himself as the Father of mercies and the God of all comfort—forming real faith, deep assurance, and genuine dependence on Christ. Listen and be encouraged to trust not in your own strength, but in the God who raises the dead.
From Luke 10:25–37, this sermon explores the Parable of the Good Samaritan and what it means to love our neighbor through service. We’re reminded that mercy flows from the compassion Jesus has shown us - and calls us to respond with lives marked by availability, generosity, and action.
In this special episode of the Sermon Bside Podcast, host Jenna Wright sits down with Staci Murray from the Bair Foundation to talk about foster care, reunification, and how the local church can live out mercy and justice. This conversation explores real stories, practical next steps, and how God calls His people to be doers of the Word through family advocacy.
In this message from Luke 10:25–37, we explore how mission is mercy. Before we can show mercy to others, we must first receive the mercy of Jesus - the true Good Samaritan who rescues and restores us. Jesus models how to live on mission with love, wisdom, and compassion, calling us to love our neighbors by pointing them to the hope found in Christ.
In this opening message of our Mercy & Justice series, we step into the parable of the Good Samaritan from Gospel of Luke 10. Before we are called to go and do likewise, we’re reminded that we are first receivers of mercy, rescued by Jesus Himself. From that mercy, we are then sent to love our neighbors in tangible ways. Listen in as we explore what mercy truly means and how it shapes the life of the church.
In this Advent message from Galatians 4:1–7, we’re reminded of the heart of the gospel: in Christ, we are no longer slaves but adopted sons and daughters of God. Through Jesus, God doesn’t merely forgive us - He brings us into His family. This sermon invites us to remember, embrace, and never minimize the immeasurable love of our Heavenly Father and the hope we have as heirs through Christ.
Romans 8:1–4 reminds us that real peace doesn’t come from being “good enough,” but from the grace of God in Jesus Christ. In Him, there is no condemnation - and a hope that truly lasts.
The curse of sin runs deep, touching every part of creation, every part of who we are. And the law, even God’s good law, cannot remove it. But the gospel can. Christ became a curse for us so we could be brought into blessing: the blessing of Abraham, the blessing of life with God, the blessing of the Spirit who dwells in us. This is why Jesus came. This is why Advent matters. The curse is not the final word. Blessing is. Galatians 3:10–14
Advent reminds us that our hope is not in our performance, but in Christ’s. The law reveals our need; the gospel gives us assurance. In Jesus, the verdict is already secure - justified by faith, not by works.
In this Advent message, we explore Paul’s contrast in Romans 6:23: the wages we earn through sin versus the free gift God offers through Jesus Christ. Scripture reminds us that there are only two ends (death or eternal life), two means (earned wages or received grace), and two masters (sin or God). This sermon invites us to anticipate eternity, confront our entitlement, and lay down the illusion of autonomy. Through Jesus, who took our wages and gives us His righteousness, we receive what we could never earn: eternal life. Listen, reflect, and remember the hope of Advent.
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