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kings' Church NYC
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Partner with us to impact our nation and beyond.Your giving helps us at kings’ Church expand the reach of the gospel, strengthen the church, and build faithful witnesses across America.👉 https://kingschurch.io/givingThis message calls kings’ Church to enter 2026 with a deeper, daily walk with the Holy Spirit. Pastor Bonny emphasizes that the Holy Spirit is not a force or feeling, but a divine Person who dwells within believers under the New Covenant. Rather than seeking only God’s provision, the church is challenged to seek His presence through intimacy, obedience, and reverence.The sermon highlights the Holy Spirit’s role as Helper, Teacher, Comforter, Empowerer, and Intercessor, urging believers to rely on His guidance in every area of life. The message concludes with a call to fresh infilling and empowerment, inviting the church to live boldly, bear lasting fruit, and walk in step with the Holy Spirit in the year ahead.
Partner with us to impact our nation and beyond.Your giving helps us at Kings’ Church expand the reach of the gospel, strengthen the church, and build faithful witnesses across America.👉 https://kingschurch.io/givingThis sermon, preached by Pastor Sincere, centers on the meaning of Christmas as the fulfillment of God’s promise through the incarnation of Jesus Christ. Drawing from Luke 2, the message emphasizes that God did not send an idea, decree, or moral instruction, but entered humanity as a person. Jesus is revealed as fully God and fully man, the promised Savior who comes near in humility. Heaven itself declares who He is, leaving no ambiguity about the meaning of Christmas. The coming of Christ demands a response from every person, as there is no neutral ground when the Savior has come.
Partner with us to impact our nation and beyond.Your giving helps us at Kings’ Church expand the reach of the gospel, strengthen the church, and build faithful witnesses across America.👉 https://kingschurch.io/givinPastor David frames Vision Sunday through the infancy narrative of Jesus, showing how God’s world-changing purposes often begin with small, obscure, faithful steps. From Luke 2, Mary and Joseph carry heaven’s promise yet still live in poverty, offering the sacrifice of the poor. The message emphasizes that God’s favor is not proven by comfort, resources, or ease, and that obedience to God’s ways matters even when the next step feels “tiny” compared to the size of the calling. Pastor David challenges the church to pursue a living relationship with God rather than mere religious customs, and to embrace the cost of mission without interpreting hardship as God’s absence. He then casts vision for Kings’ Church to raise “big Christians,” plant churches, evangelize boldly, expand media reach, and influence both the great and the small for Jesus.
Partner with us to impact our nation and beyond.Your giving helps us at kings’ Church expand the reach of the gospel, strengthen the church, and build faithful witnesses across America.👉 https://kingschurch.io/givingThis message calls believers to become big Christians marked by generosity. Bonny Andrews teaches that God is the first giver and that Christian generosity is rooted in His nature. He outlines the biblical reasons we give, how giving shapes our hearts, and how it breaks the power of mammon. He walks through five biblical categories of giving and emphasizes that generosity is worship, obedience, and faith in action. Through personal testimonies and Scripture, he challenges the church to put God first with finances, trust His promises, and expect multiplication as we honor Him.
Partner with us to impact our nation and beyond.Your giving helps us at Kings’ Church expand the reach of the gospel, strengthen the church, and build faithful witnesses across America.👉 https://kingschurch.io/givingIn this Advent message, Pastor David teaches that Christmas is not about rushing toward celebration, but about learning to wait for the arrival of Christ—His presence in history, His presence in our lives today, and His promised return. Drawing from Scripture, church tradition, cultural history, and personal stories, he explains that Advent forms us into people who know how to wait with anticipation. Just as Israel waited centuries for the Messiah, we learn to prepare our hearts for His arrival by cultivating expectation, repentance, and sensitivity to the Holy Spirit. God forms us through the waiting, shaping us into people who grow into maturity in Christ.
Partner with us to impact our nation and beyond.Your giving helps us at kings’ Church expand the reach of the gospel, strengthen the church, and build faithful witnesses across America.👉 kingschurch.io/givingIn this message, Pastor Sincere walks the church through Philippians 4:4–7 and anchors the heart of thanksgiving in Christ Himself. Using the history of the Pilgrims and Paul’s own imprisonment, he shows that Christian joy is not rooted in circumstances but in the presence of Jesus who remains constant in every season. Rejoicing produces gentleness, gentleness shapes our response to others, and thankful prayer brings the peace of God that guards our hearts and minds. True thanksgiving is not an event; it is a posture shaped by Christ’s nearness.
Partner with us to impact our nation and beyond.Your giving helps us at Kings’ Church expand the reach of the gospel, strengthen the church, and build faithful witnesses across America.👉 https://kingschurch.io/givingDr. Chris Palmer teaches from 2 Timothy 3 on how believers can stand firm in difficult times by following the spiritual leaders God places in their lives. Paul’s final letter to Timothy highlights the nature of the last days, marked by fierce challenges and self-focused living. In these conditions, Scripture calls us to hold fast to sound teaching, imitate godly conduct, and trust leaders who can recognize our calling, stir our gifts, and shape our growth. Dr. Palmer shares personal stories of how mentorship, prayer, and correction built his confidence and unlocked spiritual breakthrough. This sermon elevates the importance of leadership, discipleship, and the blessing that comes when we choose humility, trust, and alignment with the pastors God has placed over us.
Partner with us to impact our nation and beyond.Your giving helps us at kings’ Church expand the reach of the gospel, strengthen the church, and build faithful witnesses across America.👉 kingschurch.io/givingPastor Bonny Andrews shared a powerful message on the creative and transformative power of words. Drawing from Genesis 1 and Proverbs 18:21, he reminded the church that God created the world through words, and we too create the atmosphere of our lives with our speech. He urged believers to stop speaking what they see and start declaring what they know from God’s Word. From testimonies of breakthrough to personal stories of transformation, the sermon called the church to steward their words as instruments of blessing, healing, and authority over their families, workplaces, and city. Bonny emphasized that as sons and daughters of God, our language must reflect our royal identity and align with heaven’s truth.
PARTNER WITH US! Partner with us to impact our nation and beyond.Your giving helps us at Kings’ Church expand the reach of the gospel, strengthen the church, and build faithful witnesses across America.👉 kingschurch.io/givingDrawing from Matthew 25:1–13, Pastor David exhorts believers to remain faithful and spiritually awake while awaiting the promises of God. He compares modern complacency, political dependency, and spiritual sloth to the foolish virgins whose lamps ran out of oil. Through the imagery of oil, lamps, and waiting, he challenges Christians to live as mature disciples, rejecting the perpetual “childhood” mentality of entitlement and dependency. Pastor David ties this to a broader cultural critique—warning against socialism and spiritual laziness that destroy personal dignity and hinder the work ethic God commands. Ultimately, the message calls believers to be wise virgins—diligent, prayerful, industrious, and filled with the Holy Spirit—ready for both Christ’s return and the fulfillment of His promises in their lives.
PARTNER WITH USPartner with us to impact our nation and beyond.Your giving helps us at Kings’ Church expand the reach of the gospel, strengthen the church, and build faithful witnesses across America.👉 kingschurch.io/givingPastor Bonnie Andrews challenges the church to trade personal ambition for divine ambition—an ambition marked by surrender, obedience, and faith in God’s impossible plans. Using Isaiah 54 as a prophetic call, he encourages believers to worship through hardship, stretch their faith, and act before the provision appears. Human ambition glorifies self, but divine ambition glorifies God and multiplies impact beyond one’s lifetime.
PARTNER WITH USPartner with us to impact our nation and beyond.Your giving helps us at Kings’ Church expand the reach of the gospel, strengthen the church, and build faithful witnesses across America.👉 kingschurch.io/givingThis Q&A-style Sunday invited real questions and raw dialogue about faith and life in a modern culture at war with truth. Pastor David urged believers to move beyond surface-level Christianity—to reason boldly, live courageously, and anchor their worldview in Scripture. He addressed difficult topics like redemption, women in leadership, political engagement, and the renewal of the mind, reminding the church that our calling is not to escape culture but to transform it through Christlike faithfulness and truth.
Partner With UsPartner with us to impact our nation and beyond. Your giving helps us at Kings’ Church expand the reach of the gospel, strengthen the church, and build faithful witnesses across America.👉 kingschurch.io/givingElder Travid Nolt shared a powerful message on renewing the mind and walking in the truth of God’s Word. Drawing from 2 Timothy 1:7—“For God has not given us a spirit of fear, but of power, love, and a sound mind”—he revealed how many believers live in mental bondage not because of sin itself, but because of unbelief and lies that shape their thoughts. He urged the church to reject the false voices of fear, rejection, and confusion, and to fill their minds with God’s truth. True transformation, he explained, happens when we replace lies with the voice of the Holy Spirit and believe what God says about who we are—sons and daughters of God, not slaves to fear.
Partner with us to impact our nation and beyond. Your giving helps us at Kings’ Church expand the reach of the gospel, strengthen the church, and build faithful witnesses across America.👉 kingschurch.io/givingIn this powerful message, Pastor David Engelhardt calls the church to rise as faithful witnesses in a time of moral confusion and spiritual apathy. Drawing from Revelation 1, he unpacks what it means to represent Christ with courage, integrity, and endurance—just as Jesus Himself was the “faithful witness.” Pastor David reflects on personal loss and the martyrdom of his close friend, Charlie Kirk, urging believers not to retreat in fear but to live boldly for truth. He reminds the church that our calling isn’t merely to be Christians in name but to faithfully bear the testimony of Jesus through love, perseverance, and obedience. Every believer is commissioned as both king and priest, called to carry God’s dominion and righteousness into every sphere of life.
Pastor Bonny Andrews challenged King’s Church to live an “all in” life under the lordship of Jesus Christ. He began by addressing the mental health crisis in New York City and how it can be turned into the greatest gospel opportunity by connecting people to Jesus, Scripture, and community. From Genesis to Revelation, he showed how cities are often built on rebellion, independence, and competition, yet God calls His people to live surrendered lives under His authority. Being “all in” means submitting every area of life to Christ, walking in obedience, exercising radical faith, living generously, and being led by the Holy Spirit. Bonny reminded the church that salvation is a gift, but lordship is a surrendered life—Jesus must be Lord of all, not just Savior.
This sermon addressed the sobering cultural moment following Charlie Kirk’s assassination and called the church to rise up in spirit and truth. Pastor Trebor honored Charlie Kirk’s legacy and tied it to the biblical reality that truth has always been opposed. From Isaiah to Elijah, from Stephen to Paul, to Jesus Himself, truth-tellers have been met with violent resistance. The call for king’s Church in this pivotal moment is not to shrink back, but to step forward boldly in the Spirit’s power and grounded in God’s truth. The message pressed the congregation to move beyond passive Christianity into a decisive commitment: “Here I am, send me.”
Pastor David Engelhardt preached on the true mission of the church, which is to equip the saints for the work of ministry, not just to grow in numbers or focus only on evangelism. He contrasted worldly systems like socialism with the Kingdom of God, emphasizing that God’s kingdom is built on freedom, virtue, and responsibility. Preaching from Matthew 7, he explained how Christians are called to judge, not hastily or judgmentally, but righteously, with truth and gentleness. He also warned against casting “pearls before pigs,” urging believers to guard sensitive, life-giving gifts, dreams, and testimonies. Ultimately, he called the church into a season of action, to ask, seek, knock, and advance God’s Kingdom through equipping, evangelism, and faith-filled obedience.
Pastor Bonny Andrews shared a powerful message on the need for a spiritual reset as we step into a new season. Using Revelation 2 as the foundation, he reminded the church of Christ’s call to return to our first love. He challenged the congregation to realign their priorities, set clear boundaries, guard intimacy with God, and live out the original vision God has placed over their lives. Through testimonies of God’s favor, his family’s move to NYC, and stories of revival among students, Pastor Bonny called the church to surrender afresh, reprioritize devotion, and commit to building strong relationships rooted in God’s love.
Pastor David preached on the call of every believer to run their God-given race with endurance by fixing their eyes on Jesus. Drawing from Ephesians 2:8–10 and Hebrews 12:1–2, he emphasized that our identity and placement in life are God’s design, not our own choice. We are God’s workmanship, created for good works prepared in advance, and we must resist distraction and covetousness to focus on Christ. Using vivid illustrations from horse racing blinders, personal family moments, and God’s multiplied grace, he reminded the church that while valleys and trials come, the race is marked out for each of us, and victory is found by staying fixed on Jesus, the Author and Finisher of our faith.
Pastor Sincere unpacked Jesus’ radical call to discipleship, showing that following Him is not about comfort but surrender. Using Matthew 8 and Luke 14, he explained that many want the benefits of Christ without the cost of obedience. One man was too quick to follow without understanding the sacrifice, while another delayed because of family obligations. Both missed the priority of Christ’s call. True discipleship means letting go of idols, security, and divided loyalties, trusting that what we gain in Christ far outweighs anything we lose.
Elder Eric Lucas shared a message from Matthew 11:28–30, reminding the church that Jesus invites the weary and burdened into His rest. Using the story of Mary and Martha, he contrasted striving in our own strength with the peace found in relationship with Christ. He emphasized the need to rightly discern seasons of labor and rest, remaining yoked to Jesus so that our work flows from intimacy with Him rather than self-effort. Rest, he explained, is not inactivity, but Spirit-led refreshment that empowers Kingdom service.





this was good to listen to a second time