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Vintage Church Liberty Hill

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Thank you for listening to our audio podcast. Vintage Church is a Christian non-denominational church with locations all over Central Texas including Liberty Hill. Find out more about our church by browsing our website at Vintage.Church
206 Episodes
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In this opening message of Crowned 2026, Ministry Director Beth Allen explores the story of Deborah and how God calls women to rise up with courage, wisdom, and faith. As we step into a new year, this message reminds us that we are not unprepared for the battles ahead—God has equipped us with His Word, His truth, and His promises.
In this opening message of Forged 2026, Pastor Nate walks through God’s first question to a man in Scripture, “Where are you?” Unpacking Genesis 3, this message exposes how passivity, silence, and blame fracture biblical manhood, and calls men back to responsibility, courage, and faithfulness. Ultimately, the question leads us to Jesus, the faithful Man who answered where Adam failed and now calls every man to step out of hiding and follow Him. This is a call to salvation and formation and it starts with answering the question, “where are you?”
Week 6 (January 18): The Letters to the Church: Doctrine, Discipleship, and the Spirit’s WorkAs churches multiply, the apostles write to guide them. Their letters confront false teaching, encourage endurance, instruct in holiness, and reveal what it means to live under the reign of Christ. Paul describes the transformation of the mind, the renewing of the heart, and the unity of the body. He explains the gifts of the Spirit—divine empowerments for building the Church—and the fruit of the Spirit—the character Christ forms within His people.This week shows that the mission of the Church requires more than passion; it requires formation. The same Spirit who empowered the apostles now shapes believers in every generation. The epistles become the blueprint for Christian living and healthy community.
Week 5 (January 11): The Mission Expands: To the Ends of the EarthThe Church in Antioch becomes the launching point of global evangelism. Through prayer and fasting, the Holy Spirit directs the Church to send Paul and Barnabas—two men shaped by Scripture, formed through suffering, and ready for the nations. They cross cultures, confront darkness, plant churches, disciple believers, and preach Christ among Jews and Gentiles alike. Doors open, prison walls shake, and new communities of worship spring up in unexpected places.Week five celebrates the unstoppable nature of God’s mission. The gospel refuses to stay contained. It moves across borders, languages, and traditions. What began in Jerusalem is now becoming the heritage of the nations.
Week 4 (January 4): The Conversion of Saul: From Opponent to ApostleOn the road to Damascus, Saul is stopped by a blinding light and an unmistakable voice: “I am Jesus, whom you are persecuting.” Everything he believed collapses in a moment of divine confrontation. Blindness brings clarity. Helplessness becomes the doorway to calling. Through the obedience of Ananias—an ordinary disciple—Saul receives his sight, is filled with the Spirit, and rises to become the apostle who will shape Christianity more than any other human figure.This week underscores the radical nature of grace. God not only saves sinners—He transforms them into instruments of His purpose. Saul’s calling becomes a picture of every believer’s story: rescued by Jesus, filled with the Spirit, and sent with a mission.
Week 1 (December 14): The Spirit Comes: The Birth of the ChurchThe series opens in an upper room filled with expectancy. Jesus has ascended, and His followers wait—not with strategy or certainty, but with obedience. Suddenly, the promise comes. Wind roars through the house. Fire descends. The Holy Spirit fills every believer, and the Church is born in power. Peter, once the man who denied Christ, becomes the first preacher of the resurrected Lord. His message cuts the heart of the crowd, and thousands respond.This is not the story of human ingenuity. It is the story of divine empowerment. The Father keeps His promise, the Son shares His mission, and the Spirit equips the Church for a task bigger than any disciple imagined. The first week anchors the entire series in this truth: the Church of Jesus Christ began in the supernatural and must continue in the supernatural.
Week 3 (December 28): The Gospel Spreads: Stephen’s Witness and Saul’s AwakeningStephen stands before the religious rulers, radiant with faith. His sermon cuts through Israel’s history, pointing to Christ as the fulfillment of every promise. His death becomes the Church’s first martyrdom—and the spark for global expansion. Believers scatter across Judea and Samaria, carrying the message wherever they go. What Satan meant to silence becomes the very means God uses to amplify.At the center of the chaos stands Saul, convinced he is defending God by destroying the Church. Yet the seeds of transformation are already being planted in him. Beneath his zeal is a man God will soon confront. Week three demonstrates that persecution never stops the gospel—it accelerates it. And it reminds us that sometimes the greatest enemies of Christ are the very people He plans to redeem.
Christmas Eve Service
Week 2 (December 21): The Church Grows: Unity, Courage, and GenerosityAs opposition rises, the Church does not retreat—it prays. The believers gather, lift their voices, and ask God not for safety but for boldness. The ground shakes, the Spirit fills them again, and courage becomes their new normal. Their unity becomes a sign to the world that Christ is alive. Their generosity eliminates poverty among them. Their witness moves from the temple courts into homes, streets, and marketplaces.This is the Church as God intended: a Spirit-filled family marked by conviction, compassion, and shared mission. Week two reveals how spiritual power produces both bold proclamation and deep fellowship. The gospel transforms people—and transformed people transform communities.
Week 7 (December 7): From Cross to Commission: The Risen King and the Church’s MissionThe Gospels do not end with a funeral—they launch a movement. We’ll trace Jesus’ path to the cross (Gethsemane, trials, crucifixion), His bodily resurrection and appearances, and His final instructions that shape the church for all time: “All authority… Go, make disciples…” (Matt 28:18–20), “As the Father has sent Me, so I am sending you” (John 20:21–22), “You will be My witnesses… to the ends of the earth” (Acts 1:8). This finale gathers hope, assurance, and assignment—linking directly into our next series on the Apostles and the early church. Come ready to lift your eyes to the risen Jesus and to step into the mission He still owns and empowers.
Midweek | Joy | Pastor Nate Brown - December 3rd, 2025
Week 6 (November 30): God or Mammon: Wealth, Worship, and Kingdom StewardshipMoney isn’t neutral—it forms us. Jesus presses the heart with three moments: the Rich Young Ruler walking away from the Treasure he couldn’t buy (Matt 19:16–30/Mark 10:17–31), the warning that you cannot serve God and money (Matt 6:19–24; Luke 16:10–13), and the Parable of the Talents calling us to faithful, fearless stewardship (Matt 25:14–30). Together they answer the questions modern disciples actually live with: What do I treasure? Who do I trust? What will I do with what God has entrusted? Expect a gospel vision of generosity, contentment, and courage that fueled the early church—and still frees hearts today.
Week 5 (November 23): Sermon on the Mount: The Way of the KingBefore the early church had buildings or budgets, it had Jesus’ manifesto—the Sermon on the Mount (Matthew 5–7). On a hillside, the King redefines life in His Kingdom: blessedness that runs against the grain, righteousness that is deeper than rule-keeping, enemy-love that disarms cycles of hate, prayer that trusts the Father, and wisdom that builds on rock. This message gathers the Beatitudes, salt-and-light calling, the Lord’s Prayer, freedom from anxiety, and the call to do what Jesus says. If you’ve ever asked, “What does discipleship look like in real life?”, Jesus answers here—clearly, concretely, and compellingly.
Week 4 (November 16): John: The Eagle — Jesus the Son of GodJohn soars. From “In the beginning was the Word” to the seven signs and the thunder of the I AM statements, John unveils the divine identity of Jesus and invites you to believe and have life in His name. This week shows why John is often a first read for seekers and a lifetime companion for saints.  We’ll trace how John structures his Gospel to reveal glory through love, truth, and the cross—forming a church that abides in Christ and bears lasting fruit. If you need assurance, renewal, or a fresh view of Jesus, John will lift your eyes.
Week 3 (November 9): Luke: The Man — Jesus the Son of ManPhysician. Historian. Disciple-maker. Luke writes an orderly account so you can have certainty about the things you’ve been taught. He highlights Jesus’ true humanity, the presence and power of the Holy Spirit, and good news for the outsider and overlooked. From the songs of chapters 1–2 to unique parables like the Good Samaritan and Prodigal Son, Luke reveals a Savior who seeks and saves the lost and gathers a table of sinners turned saints. Come ready to see prayer, mercy, and mission up close—and to join Jesus in seeking the lost where you live.
Esther: For Such A Time| Midweek | November 5th, 2025 | Ministry Director, Beth Allen
Week 2 (November 2): Matthew: The Lion — Jesus the KingMatthew opens with a royal genealogy and never stops announcing “the Kingdom of Heaven.” Aimed especially at a Jewish audience, Matthew presents Jesus as the long-promised Messiah-King who fulfills the Law and the Prophets and calls disciples into a new way of life. From the Sermon on the Mount to the Great Commission, you’ll see how Matthew organizes Jesus’ teaching into five great discourses and why that matters for your daily obedience. If you’ve ever wondered how the Old Testament promises land in Jesus—and in us—this week will help you follow the King with clarity and courage.
Week 1 (October 26): Mark: The Ox — Jesus the Suffering ServantBrevity. Urgency. Power. Mark’s favorite word is “immediately,” and the pace drives straight to the cross. Here Jesus is the Servant-Savior whose authority over demons, disease, and nature is matched by His call to costly discipleship: “Take up your cross and follow Me.”  You’ll discover how Mark’s eyewitness feel (rooted in Peter’s preaching) strengthens a church under pressure, and how embracing Jesus’ path of service and sacrifice turns ordinary believers into bold witnesses. If you’re tired, anxious, or tempted to quit, Mark will reframe your mission.
Week 7 (October 19): Nehemiah and Malachi: Rebuilding and the End of an Age Nehemiah leads the effort to rebuild Jerusalem’s walls, but more importantly, to rebuild the people in covenant with God. Through opposition and difficulty, Nehemiah teaches us perseverance, prayer, and leadership rooted in God’s strength. His work prepares the way for a renewed community that looks forward to God’s ultimate redemption. Simultaneously, Malachi closes the Old Testament with a call to faithfulness. He confronts empty worship, corrupt priests, and weary people, while pointing to the coming “messenger” who will prepare the way of the Lord. His final words leave God’s people waiting, longing for the day when God’s promises will be fulfilled in the Messiah.
Week 6 (October 12): Ezra: Return & RestorationUnder Persian rule, God’s people are allowed to return home. Ezra leads a spiritual renewal, teaching the Word of God and restoring covenant faithfulness. This return is only partial — the people are back in the land, but they long for full redemption. Ezra reminds us that true restoration is not just physical but spiritual — a restoration of heart and covenant.
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