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In Acts 5, revival turns into resistance. The apostles are arrested, beaten, and warned to stay silent. And yet they leave rejoicing.Why? Because they did not see suffering as failure. They saw it as fellowship with Jesus. This message challenges a comfort-first version of Christianity and invites us into something deeper. Obedience may cost you. Faithfulness may lead through pain. But when your identity is rooted in Christ and your hope is anchored in the resurrection, suffering does not have the final word.If you are walking through pressure, loss, or disappointment, this teaching is for you.
What does it look like when God’s presence is not just talked about, but carried?In this message from our Church on Fire series through the book of Acts, we look at Acts 5 and the early church as a community marked by the real, active presence of God. As the Spirit fills ordinary people, lives are healed, faith becomes public, and the church becomes a visible sign of Jesus’ reign in the world.This teaching invites us to see that signs and wonders were never the point. They point to something greater. The living presence of the risen Jesus at work through His people. When the church hosts God’s presence, faith wakes up, outsiders are drawn in, and transformation moves beyond gatherings into everyday life.From this week’s message, God’s Presence Transforms Lives. Watch or listen now.
What happens when the Holy Spirit fills a community but our inner lives do not match our outer appearance?In Acts 5, we are confronted with a sobering moment in the early church where hypocrisy is exposed and God’s holiness is taken seriously. This message explores the danger of curated faith, unprocessed wounds, and pretending to be someone we are not, even while participating in the things of God.Through the story of Ananias and Sapphira, we are invited to examine where we may be managing an image instead of nurturing a transformed inner life. This teaching calls the church back to congruence, reverence, confession, and a deeper dedication to Jesus. Not a performance, but a life shaped by truth, humility, and the presence of the Holy Spirit.
In Acts 4, we are given a snapshot of what life looks like when resurrection power moves beyond a moment and into a community.This message explores how the Holy Spirit reshapes everyday life, not just our beliefs or worship gatherings. We see a church formed by covenant rather than convenience, marked by deep commitment to one another, a transformed relationship with possessions, and a shared responsibility for those in need.Rather than mastering spiritual content, the early church was shaped by the living presence of Jesus. Their unity, generosity, and care for one another became a visible witness to the resurrection. Not through programs or pressure, but through a reordered way of life.This teaching invites us to consider how resurrection life takes shape in ordinary spaces. Our relationships, our resources, and our response to need. It is a call to move from consumer Christianity toward a rooted, shared life centered on Jesus.
Fear and anxiety shape so much of how we live and even how we pray. In Acts 4, the early church shows us another way. When opposition came, they did not retreat or ask for safety. They gathered together, prayed scripture, and asked God for boldness.This message explores how fear trains us to pray small and how the Holy Spirit forms us to pray with courage. When God’s people depend on His presence, their faith grows, their prayers deepen, and the name of Jesus goes forward with power.From our Church on Fire series through the book of Acts.
In Acts 4, the early church is offered a deal: you can keep your faith, just keep it quiet.After a public miracle and a public proclamation of the resurrected Jesus, Peter and John are arrested and brought before the most powerful and educated leaders of their day. The pressure is clear. Stop speaking. Stop teaching. Keep the name of Jesus out of the public square.But instead of shrinking back, Peter is filled with the Holy Spirit and speaks with boldness. He names what’s true: the man was healed by Jesus Christ of Nazareth, the One they crucified, the One God raised from the dead. And then comes the line that still confronts every generation: “We cannot help speaking about what we have seen and heard.”This message challenges two kinds of Christianity that the enemy loves: silent Christians and private Christians. It exposes how our culture trains us to compartmentalize faith, keeping it personal, polite, and manageable. And it invites us into a different way, a witness that is humble, faithful, and visible.The world isn’t waiting for impressive Christians. It’s waiting for ordinary people who have been with Jesus.
What does resurrection look like beyond Sunday?In this message from our Church on Fire series, Bill Dogterom walks through Acts 3 and reminds us that resurrection life is not just something we believe in, it is something we live. When Peter and John encounter a man who has spent his life on the margins, we see that healing is not about spectacle but about pointing people to Jesus and inviting them into a new way of life.This teaching challenges us to consider how the resurrection shapes our everyday moments, our work, our relationships, and the places where life feels heavy or ordinary. It also speaks directly to those who feel disqualified by failure, reminding us that brokenness is often the place where God meets us and invites us forward.Resurrection life is not confined to the past or the future. It is an invitation to join Jesus in His restoring work right now.
Advent is an invitation to slow down, redeem time, and make room for Jesus. In this final Advent message, Bill Dogterom reminds us that love is not a shallow feeling or a seasonal mood. It’s the foundation of everything God is doing in us.Through John 3, 1 John 4, Romans 8, and Ephesians 3, we’re invited to stand in the reality that God’s love does not depend on our performance. Not in our best moments, and not in our worst. This is love that does not condemn, love that stays present in the dark, and love that transforms us from the inside out.If you’ve ever felt disqualified, numb, cynical, or tired, this message is a steady reminder: God is for you, and nothing can separate you from His love.
At some point, most of us have asked the question, even if we’ve never said it out loud. Does God actually want me to be happy?In this Advent teaching, Pastor Darren sits with that tension and invites us to slow down and be honest about how we think about joy. Not the kind that depends on things going well, but the kind that can exist even when life feels complicated. He looks at the Christmas story and points out how joy shows up right in the middle of uncertainty, fear, and ordinary people trying to trust God one step at a time.There’s an invitation here to rethink happiness, not as something we chase or manufacture, but as something rooted in who God is and how close He comes to us. Especially in a season where expectations are high and emotions run deep, this conversation helps ground joy in something deeper than circumstances.
In this Advent message, Pastor Bill Dogterom invites us to look beyond a shallow idea of peace and see the deeper work Jesus is doing in us. Peace is not just the absence of conflict. It is the restoration of what has been fractured in our hearts and in our relationships. Bill walks through Isaiah 9 and Ephesians 2 to show how Jesus takes the fragments of our lives and brings them together into something whole.This teaching calls us to receive the peace Jesus offers and to become people who bring that peace into a divided world. As followers of the Prince of Peace, we learn how to step out of hostility, lay aside the need to be right, and join God in his work of reconciliation.
We are beginning a four week series through Advent as we prepare the way for Christmas. Advent is the season where the Church slows down so we can become awake to God’s presence. It teaches us to wait, to notice, and to make room for the God who comes close.In this opening message, Pastor Bill calls us to step out of the rush and become present to what God is doing right now. Advent invites us to breathe, to pay attention, and to trust that God meets us in the real moments of our lives.Pastor Bill reminds us that thanksgiving is more than a reaction. It is a practice that grounds us and becomes the place where hope grows. Through Romans 5 and 1 Thessalonians 5, we see how joy, prayer, and gratitude shape us into people who can carry hope in every season, even in suffering or uncertainty.Advent forms us into people who recognize that God is near in the highs, the lows, and the everyday moments in between.
Pastor Darren teaches from Acts 3 and invites us to recover a simple truth. Healing was never meant to be unusual for the people of Jesus. In the early church it was normal for God to meet people in their pain, restore what was broken and reveal his Kingdom through ordinary disciples who made themselves available.Through the story of the man at the Beautiful Gate and the testimonies coming from our own community, Pastor Darren shows how Jesus continues his ministry through the Church today. This message calls us to lay down a powerless version of faith, raise our expectations and learn to pray with compassion, courage and trust.If you have ever wondered how healing fits into everyday discipleship, this teaching will help you step toward a bigger and more hopeful view of what life with Jesus can look like.
Most of us do not feel rich. We just feel like we never have enough. We live in a culture of Amazon boxes, comparison, and quiet anxiety about money, and it is easy to believe that life really does consist in the abundance of our possessions.In this teaching, Pastor Darren Rouanzoin walks through Acts 4, Luke 12, John the Baptist’s call to repentance, and the story of Zacchaeus to show that Jesus cares deeply about how we relate to our stuff. Not because he wants something from us, but because he wants freedom for us.You will hear real stories from our church family of canceled debts, unexpected cars given away, rent covered, and spontaneous offerings that could only be explained by grace. Then Pastor Darren presses into the deeper question behind all of it: what would Jesus see if he looked at your bank statement, and what would change if he was truly in charge of your finances?This message is for anyone who feels the pull of consumerism, who feels suspicious of the church and money, or who longs to live with open hands but does not know how to start.
When the Holy Spirit takes hold of your life, nothing stays off limits. In this message from our Church on Fire series, Pastor Darren Rouanzoin teaches that when God fills His people with His Spirit, generosity becomes the natural response.This isn’t about guilt or percentages. It’s about surrender. The same Spirit that raised Jesus from the dead is forming a people who live with open hands and open hearts. When we give everything to Him, we become a church marked by abundance, grace, and extravagant generosity.Scripture: Acts 2:42–47, Acts 4:32–37, 1 John 3:16–18, Deuteronomy 15:7–11Speaker: Darren RouanzoinSeries: Church on Fire
What does real devotion look like in a world built around comfort and convenience? In this message, Pastor Darren looks at Acts 2:42–47 and shows us a picture of the first church. It was a community of people devoted to Jesus, devoted to one another, and devoted to His mission.So much of faith today can become about consuming spiritual content, showing up to events, or chasing comfort. But the call of Jesus is different. He invites us to be all in. To live in a way that reflects heaven on earth. To be a people shaped by Scripture, filled with the Spirit, and committed to love.This teaching will help you see what the church was meant to be and how to live with wholehearted devotion in an age of consumerism.
The gospel is not an idea or an experience. It is a person. In this message from our Church on Fire series, Pastor Ramin walks through Peter’s first sermon in Acts 2 and shows the full story of Jesus—the King who lived, died, rose again, and now reigns with power and love.If you’ve been trying to carry life on your own, this is an invitation to turn to Him and receive the life only Jesus can give.
The Spirit of God still speaks. In Acts 2, Peter stands and reminds the crowd that God’s promise is for everyone. Sons and daughters. Young and old. Every person filled with the Holy Spirit now carries His voice into the world.In this message, Pastor Darren teaches that prophecy isn’t about performance or hype. It’s about revealing the heart of Jesus. The Church is meant to be a prophetic people who listen to God and speak His words of life, truth, and love.
What does it mean to speak in tongues, and why does it matter for followers of Jesus today? In this message, Pastor Darren teaches from Acts and 1 Corinthians to bring clarity to what the Bible says about this gift.Tongues are a way of praying and praising God through the power of the Holy Spirit. They help us grow in intimacy with God, strengthen our spirit, and build faith in ways our own words cannot. Tongues are not proof of salvation, they are not a requirement to follow Jesus, and they are not something to be afraid of. They are a gift meant to bring us closer to the presence of God and to stir our hearts toward love.This message helps us see that the Spirit still speaks, still fills, and still moves through His people today.






















