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Gospel City Messages

Author: Gospel City Church

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Gospel City Church exists to glorify God & make disciples of Jesus Christ. This podcast includes the weekly teaching from our Sunday Gatherings.
548 Episodes
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Pastor Micah Klutinoty preaches from 1 Corinthians 13:1-13 that love is the foundation of life in the body of Christ and must shape everything we do. While spiritual gifts are valuable, they are meaningless without Christ-like love that is patient, kind, humble, and selfless. Unlike the temporary gifts given to the church, love will endure forever, making it the greatest and most lasting expression of the Christian life.
Pastor Micah Klutinoty preaches from 1 Corinthians 12:12-31. Because spiritual gifts are Spirit-given expressions of grace, every believer has a meaningful role in strengthening the body of Christ. In the church, no member is unnecessary and no member is superior, each person is intentionally placed by God and called to actively contribute to the unity, health, and mission of the church. Rather than living independently, believers are arranged together so that through their diverse gifts the whole body is built up.
Pastor Micah Klutinoty preaches from 1 Corinthians 12:1–11 and we see that spiritual gifts aren’t badges of spiritual status, but Spirit-given expressions of grace meant to help every member strengthen the church. These gifts come from the triune God and are given “for the common good,” blessing believers, building a dynamic witness, clarifying God’s leaders, and deepening unity and joy. Ultimately, the Spirit sovereignly distributes different gifts to different people so the whole body is equipped and built up.
Pastor Brent Thomas shares that Philippians 4:6–8 calls us to fight anxiety by making four intentional turns: pressure into praise, stress points into prayer prompts, pessimism into a grateful perspective, and our plans into God’s purposes. As we trust that His ways and wisdom are higher than ours (Isaiah 55:8–9; Romans 11:33–34), He replaces anxious hearts with the peace we have through Jesus Christ (Romans 5:1).
Pastor Brent Thomas shares how we have to live as God’s children, resting under the steady stream of His love and faithful care. Anxiety often exposes what’s happening underneath: like prioritizing physical needs, doubting God’s power, and grasping for control instead of seeking His Kingdom. But Jesus reminds us, if the Father notices every sparrow, how much more must He care for us.
Pastor Micah Klutinoty shares when God’s grace captures your heart, money stops being your master and radical generosity becomes a natural overflow. As we give with faith, God produces a harvest of righteousness and thanksgiving through us, impacting the world and bringing glory back to Him.
Pastor Micah Klutinoty shares that Christ’s grace makes us generous, and for believers, tithing is a faithful starting point. Practically, tithing trains us to put God first, trust Him as our source, grow in faith, connect our money to kingdom impact, and store up treasure in heaven.
Pastor Micah Klutinoty shares God’s answer to money isn’t poverty, it’s contentment in Christ. Money tempts us into the “more,” “worry,” and “loss” traps, but Scripture calls us to diligent, righteous living and a faithful approach to provision. True contentment can’t be earned by being rich or poor; it’s found in Christ.
Pastor Micah Klutinoty shares that greed deceives us into believing life is found in riches. But greed actually springs from discontentment and produces entitlement, covetousness, selfishness, and a false sense of eternal security. True wealth is being rich toward God and treasuring Christ above all and using our earthly resources to show how deeply we value Him.
Pastor Micah Klutinoty shares how money is a matter of worship because it reveals who or what we truly serve, shaping both what we love and who we obey. Jesus calls us to replace a horizontal love of money with a vertical love for Christ, viewing all we have as a gift from God to be used as a tool for Kingdom impact.
Pastor Wilson Green encourages us that because Jesus is the Son of God and our great High Priest, we can draw near to God in prayer with confidence, freedom, and honesty. We can pray effectively because Jesus went before us, honestly because He understands and sympathizes with our weakness and temptation, and boldly because He will give mercy and grace when we need it.
Jeremiah Canfield encourages us to consider our view of King Jesus. In his message on Joshua, he examines what a true heart toward Christ looks like and ultimately, asks the question: Are you fully surrendered to King Jesus?
Pastor Micah Klutinoty in Matthew 2:1-12 shows us how the visit of the wise men reveals Jesus as the true King of the nations by drawing people from afar, exposing hearts, fulfilling prophecy, and even threatening worldly, godless power while still a baby. Their costly, joyful worship confronts us with a choice: the King who humbled Himself to become a child is worthy not just of our attention, but of our whole-hearted worship and entire lives.
Pastor Tyler Downing in Matthew 1:18-25 invites us to honor the Lord by faithfully embracing the specific life He’s ordained for us, using Joseph as an example of compassionate justice, obedient faith, and humble recognition of his own need for a Savior as he names the child “Jesus.” He ties Joseph’s story to our own deep longings, echoing C.S. Lewis’ insight that desires this world can’t satisfy point us to the reality that we were made for another world, and ultimately for Christ Himself.
Pastor Micah Klutinoty in Luke 1:26-38 shares how God uses humble, surrendered people like Mary to carry out His extraordinary plan of salvation. We see that God is the One who initiates salvation, chooses the humble, equips by His grace, and accomplishes the impossible. In response, true faith humbly surrenders to what God says and trusts Him to do what only He can do.
Pastor Brent Thomas in Luke 1:5-25 shares that God is absolutely faithful to fulfill His promises no matter how long it’s been, how unlikely the circumstances, or how much we’ve struggled with doubt. In the story of Zechariah, the angel announces clear, specific promises about John that reveal God’s gracious plan to bring joy, salvation, and fulfillment of His Word. Our response can either posture us to rejoice in those promises or to stumble through them, but it never changes God’s commitment to do what He has said.
Pastor Micah Klutinoty in John 21:18-25 shares that following Jesus means remembering that we are not our own. We belong, body and soul, in life and death, to God and to our Savior Jesus Christ. Because our future and our story belong to Jesus, we can face suffering without fear or comparison, trusting that God is using every trial to make us more like Christ.
Pastor Micah Klutinoty in John 21:1-17 shares that following Jesus means resting your confidence not in your own strength or morality, but in Christ’s sovereign rule and merciful work on the cross, which cancels your debt and gives you true life. As His sheep, believers belong to Jesus, grow by a steady diet of God’s Word, and meet together to feed and mature in Him. Those who shepherd God’s people must know the Word, faithfully feed the flock, and be motivated above all by their love for Christ and His people.
Pastor Micah Klutinoty in John 20:19-31 shares that the risen Jesus offers true life to all who believe, bringing peace (with God, within, and toward the world), purpose as ambassadors of reconciliation, and a patient pursuit that meets us in our doubts. In Him we find everything we need—peace, mission, and mercy—so that others might be urged and welcomed to repentance and faith.
Pastor Micah Klutinoty in John 20:1-18 shares that because Jesus truly rose from the dead, we are invited into a living relationship and eternal brotherhood with Him. His resurrection is confirmed by both undeniable evidence and personal eyewitness encounters that reveal His power and love. Like Mary and John, believers are called to love Him deeply, believe without seeing, treasure His lordship, live as sons and daughters, and boldly proclaim, “I have seen the Lord!”
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Comments (1)

Eleanor Bontrager

love our new name! Same mission!

Feb 6th
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