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Pillar Church Podcast
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Following Jesus was never meant to stop with us.In this message, “You’re Supposed to Make Disciples,” we look at Jesus’ words in Matthew 28 and the mission He gave every believer: “Go and make disciples of all nations.”Jesus didn’t die to create passive church attenders—He died to raise up disciple makers. The call of every Christian is not only to grow in faith, but to help others grow as well.In this sermon, you’ll hear about:Why every believer is called to make disciplesHow following Jesus naturally leads to helping others follow HimWhy you don’t have to be “perfect” or know everything to start discipling someoneThe four simple steps that help anyone become a disciple makerHow living out your faith becomes the greatest witness to othersWe gather to worship, grow in our faith, and then go into the world with the Gospel. Because the Church Jesus builds is not just a place people attend—it’s a movement of people who follow Him and help others do the same.The question isn’t whether you’re growing in your faith.The question is: Are you helping someone else grow too?
Prayer is more than a moment.It’s more than a routine.Prayer is how the church lives.In this message, “What Happens When You’re Serious About Prayer,” we walk through the book of Acts and see how the early church made prayer central to everything they did. From the very beginning, believers gathered with one heart and one voice, seeking God together and depending on Him in every circumstance.The early church didn’t treat prayer as an afterthought. It was the place where their unity was strengthened, where they continually received power from God, and where they found courage to keep proclaiming Jesus even in the face of opposition.In this sermon, you’ll hear about:How prayer unified the early believersWhy prayer was the source of their power and boldnessWhat it looks like when prayer becomes our first responseHow the church prayed in uncertainty, suffering, prison, and even deathThis message challenges us to reconsider the role prayer plays in our lives—and asks a searching question:Is prayer our last resort, or our first response?Because the early church didn’t just believe in prayer.They built their lives around it.
The enemy doesn’t fear talent.He doesn’t fear strategy.He fears a Church filled with the Holy Spirit.In this message, “Hell Hates More: You Need More Of The Holy Spirit,” we return to Acts 1 and the promise Jesus gave His disciples: “You shall receive power when the Holy Spirit has come upon you.”Before they were sent, they were told to wait.Before they witnessed, they were filled.Because the mission of God cannot be accomplished in human strength.This sermon unpacks the reality that there is more available for every believer.In this message, you’ll hear about:The three baptisms revealed in ScriptureThe difference between salvation, water baptism, and Spirit baptismWhy Jesus is the One who baptizes in the Holy Spirit and fireWhat to do if your spiritual flame feels like it’s flickeringHow to be refilled for specific assignments and fresh boldnessWhether you’ve never been baptized in the Holy Spirit…Whether your fire has grown dim…Or whether you need fresh power for the mission in front of you…There is more.More power.More oil.More boldness.More divine enablement.Hell hates when believers live dependent on the Spirit—because a Spirit-filled Church changes everything.
In this message, “Hell Hates Pleasing: Why The Church Must Never Get Too Selfish,” we look at Paul’s prayer in Colossians 1 and confront a sobering truth: the goal of our lives is to walk in a manner worthy of the Lord—fully pleasing to Him.The enemy doesn’t fear comfortable Christianity.He fears a Church that lives to please God.This sermon challenges believers to examine whether we are living worthy of the Gospel or drifting into self-centered faith. Because we do not belong to ourselves—we were bought at a price. Our calling is higher. Our purpose is clearer.In this message, you’ll hear about:What it truly means to live a life worthy of GodWhy pleasing the Lord requires obedience, not convenienceHow real faith produces visible fruit through good worksWhy knowing God deeply matters more than success, power, or statusThe danger of a selfish Church in a world that needs lightDrawing from Colossians 1, 1 Corinthians 6, Ephesians 4, Philippians 1 & 3, James 2, Titus 2, and more, this message calls the Church back to its true focus: honoring God, bearing fruit, and increasing in the knowledge of Him.Because when the Church lives to please God,hell loses ground.And when believers stop living for themselves,the Gospel becomes visible again.
Community is more than a crowd. It’s more than a large gathering. Community is family.In this message, “Hell Hates Small,” we walk through Acts 2 and Acts 5 to see that the early church didn’t just grow in public spaces, but from house to house—around tables, in shared meals, prayer, teaching, and everyday life together. It also confronts why we often resist that kind of closeness. Small community can feel risky, exposing our struggles and calling us to forgive and bear one another’s burdens—yet Scripture shows that this is exactly where healing, growth, and true discipleship take root.In this sermon, you’ll hear about:Why we run from close communityHow God designed us for family, not a fanbaseWhere confession, forgiveness, and healing truly happenWhat it means to lay our lives down in love for one anotherThis message challenges us to step out of isolation and into intentional, vulnerable community—and asks a searching question: Will we choose comfort and anonymity, or will we choose the kind of closeness that forms us into the likeness of Christ?Because hell hates small.And small is where disciples are made.
Worship is more than a moment.It’s more than a song.Worship is obedience.In this message, “Worship Is Obedience,” we walk through Genesis 22 and discover that true worship is revealed not by what we say or sing, but by how we live when God asks something costly of us.The story of Abraham and Isaac shows us that worship often leads us into moments of testing, requires deep faith, demands that we carry what’s hard, and ultimately invites us into wonder when God reveals Himself as provider.In this sermon, you’ll hear about:Why worship often begins with a testHow obedience requires faith before understandingWhat it means to carry the weight of surrenderHow God meets obedience with provision and wonderThis message challenges us to reexamine what worship really looks like in our daily lives—and asks a simple but searching question:Will we trust God enough to obey Him, even when the cost is high?Because worship isn’t just expressed with our words—It’s proven through our obedience.
What if everybody started sowing—like the harvest actually depended on it?In this message, “What If Everybody Started Sowing?” we’re reminded that the call of Jesus is not passive. The command is simple and urgent: “Go into all the world and proclaim the gospel.”This sermon challenges believers to live on mission every day—keeping the light on, walking a different path, and moving in the opposite spirit of the world around us.In this message, you’ll hear about:Why believers are called to stay visible and keep the light onWhat it means to walk the narrow road when culture chooses the wide oneHow to overcome evil by doing goodWhy your life should model a different outcomeHow to be ready to share your faith—at any momentYou’ll also be encouraged to be ready with:Your personal story of what Jesus has doneBiblical answers grounded in truth and gentlenessScripture for moments when people need hopePractical help when others need it mostThe harvest is ready.The question is no longer who should go—It’s what would happen if everyone did?
The world has a problem—and Jesus named it clearly.Humanity is lost and weary, like sheep without a shepherd.In this message, “The Great Problem of the Church: Understanding Your Place to Take Your Place,” we look at Jesus’ words in Matthew 9 and confront both the condition of the world and the responsibility of the Church.The harvest is ready—but the workers are few. The issue isn’t the field. It’s whether the Church is willing to step in, wake up, and take responsibility for the work God has entrusted to us.In this sermon, you’ll hear about:Why minimizing the problem leads to ignoring the solutionThe reality of a weary, lost worldWhy the Church often misunderstands its roleWhat keeps believers from serving and stepping upHow Jesus calls us to be part of the solutionJesus didn’t just tell us to pray for workers—He called us to become them.If you call this church home, this message will challenge you to stop spectating and start participating—because the more God moves among us, the greater the harvest He entrusts to us.
Growth is a gift—but it’s rarely comfortable.God often uses seasons of divine discomfort to stretch us, mature us, and move us forward. What feels inconvenient, costly, or even frustrating is often evidence that He is doing something deeper than we can see.In this message, “Divine Discomfort: Growth Brings Beautiful Challenges,” we explore how spiritual growth doesn’t happen accidentally—and it doesn’t come without tension. When God brings increase, it forces us to confront what needs to change.Through Scripture, we see that growth:Comes from God alone—not effort, talent, or positionExposes whether our hearts respond with complaints or convictionRequires maturity, responsibility, and the willingness to let go of childish waysDrawing from 1 Corinthians 3, Acts 6, and 1 Corinthians 13, this sermon highlights how the early Church navigated rapid growth—not by avoiding problems, but by addressing them with wisdom, prayer, and obedience. What could have divided them instead multiplied their impact.In this sermon, you’ll hear about:Why God is the true source of all growthHow growth can reveal what’s really in our heartsThe difference between reacting in frustration and responding with faithWhy maturity always costs something—but leads to something betterIf you’re in a season where things feel stretched, uncomfortable, or demanding more of you than before, this message may help you see it differently.Because divine discomfort isn’t meant to harm you—It’s often the evidence that God is growing you.
We live in a world that demands proof, clarity, and control.But Scripture tells us there is another way to live—a better way.In this message, “Walking By Faith // How To Please The Lord,” we explore what it truly means to walk by faith and why faith—not answers—is what God uses most to develop our lives.Rooted in 2 Corinthians 5, this sermon reminds us that while our earthly lives may feel temporary, uncertain, and even burdensome at times, God has prepared something eternal—and He has given us His Spirit as a guarantee. Faith allows us to live confidently now, even when we can’t see what’s next.In this sermon, you’ll hear about:What biblical faith really is—and what it is notWhy faith is more than belief; it’s a way of seeing and livingHow faith is anchored in the person, promises, and work of JesusThe difference between walking by sight and walking by faithWhy faith is not passive, emotional, or blind optimismHow God grows and reveals our faith through His Word and through trialsWith passages from 2 Corinthians 5, Hebrews 11, Romans 10, James 1, 1 Peter 1, Jude 3, and more, this message calls believers to contend for the faith, set their minds on things above, and live with confidence—whether at home in the body or present with the Lord.If you’ve been searching for certainty, clarity, or reassurance, this message will challenge you to shift your focus and trust God more deeply—not by what you see, but by who He is.Because faith isn’t pretending everything is fine.It’s confidently trusting that God is faithful—no matter what season you’re in.
Some seasons don’t gently ease in—they hit hard. Unexpected pressure. Rising tension. Questions about what’s next.As we step into a rocky year, the real question isn’t whether challenges will come—it’s how we’ll respond when they do.In this message, “A Rocky Year Is Here: Will You Be One Who Crumbles Or Climbs?”, we’re reminded that Scripture never hides the reality of trials. Jesus Himself said trouble would come—but He also declared that He has already overcome the world.This sermon walks through the tension of living in a broken world while placing our hope in an unshakable God, calling believers to trade fear for faith and anxiety for trust.In this sermon, you’ll hear about:- Why difficulty is part of life—but defeat doesn’t have to be- How hope sustains us when pressure rises and peace feels distant- The tension between serving God and trusting material security- What it means to steward wisely while stacking your prayers- Why building your life on the Rock matters more than ever- How God uses rocky seasons not to break us—but to grow usThrough passages like John 16, Isaiah 41, Romans 12, Matthew 6 & 7, Psalm 62, and more, this message points us back to a simple, steady truth: God alone is our rock, our salvation, and our refuge.If you’re facing uncertainty, fear, or the weight of hard decisions, this message will challenge and encourage you to stand firm—and even climb—on the Rock that cannot be shaken.A rocky year may be here.But those who build on the Rock will not fall.CONNECT WITH US!Pillar Church Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/pillarfollowerPillar Church Website: https://thepillar.comPreston Morrison Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/prestonmorr...Pillar Church is led by Preston Morrison and located in Scottsdale, Arizona.#jesus #church #discipleship #prestonmorrisonCONNECT WITH US!Pillar Church Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/pillarfollowerPillar Church Website: https://thepillar.comPreston Morrison Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/prestonmorr...Pillar Church is led by Preston Morrison and located in Scottsdale, Arizona.#jesus #church #discipleship #prestonmorrisonCONNECT WITH US!Pillar Church Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/pillarfollowerPillar Church Website: https://thepillar.comPreston Morrison Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/prestonmorr...Pillar Church is led by Preston Morrison and located in Scottsdale, Arizona.#jesus #church #discipleship #prestonmorrison
Most of us live with the quiet confidence of “I’ve got this.”We plan, we build, we hustle—and we assume God will bless whatever we put our hands to.But what if the real issue isn’t what you’re building…What if it’s who you’re building with?In this message, “Build With Him, Not Without Him,” Pastor Brent walks through Proverbs 16 and delivers a timely, heart-checking reminder as we close out the year: Life was never meant to be built independently of God.Through scripture, personal stories, and real-life examples, this sermon challenges the mindset of self-sufficiency and invites us into a better way—partnering with the Lord in every plan, step, and season.In this sermon, you’ll hear about:- The danger of saying “I’ve got this” and why self-reliance eventually falls short- The difference between God’s process and God’s answer- Why checking your motives is essential if you want God involved in what you’re building- How committing your plans to the Lord leads to lasting successWhether you’re building a career, a family, a business, or your future—this message will challenge you to ask one crucial question:Am I building with Him… or without Him?If you’re ready to stop carrying the weight alone and start trusting God to direct your steps, this message is for you.
At Christmas, we celebrate more than the birth of Jesus. We celebrate the truth that God chose to be with us. In Matthew 1:18–25, Jesus is given the name Immanuel, meaning God with us, revealing a God who is not distant, detached, or indifferent, but present and near. Jesus came to save His people from their sins, to reveal the heart of the Father, and to dwell among us in grace and truth. The greatest gift of Christmas is not found under a tree, but in the One wrapped in swaddling clothes, who humbled Himself, took on human form, and entered our world by love and choice. Christmas declares that God goes before us, walks with us, and invites us to abide in Him in the middle of our joy, our pain, and our ordinary lives.
Before the foundation of the world, Jesus shared perfect glory and intimacy with the Father, yet humanity was created by God, for God, and to be like God in order to live in divine connection with Him. From the garden to the cross, God’s desire has always been friendship, not distance. Jesus made this clear when He said He no longer calls us servants but friends, revealing the heart of God and the depth of His love. That friendship came at a great cost, not with silver or gold, but with the precious blood of Christ, chosen before the world began so that we could be restored to radical intimacy with God.
Jesus is our peace, and Scripture shows why His peace is unlike anything the world can offer. God is not the author of confusion but of peace, and Jesus gives us a gift of peace for our minds and hearts, calling us not to be troubled or afraid. Jesus Himself is perfectly at peace with the Father, and through faith we have peace with God. Even in discipline God produces a peaceful harvest in those He trains. Christ sits at the right hand of the Father, and we are called to set our minds on the realities of heaven. The greatest way for us to walk in lasting peace is to keep our trust and thoughts fixed on God, for He promises to keep in perfect peace all who look to Him.
In this message, we look at how Jesus embodies both the grace that saves us and the truth that reveals who we are. We learn that God’s grace rescues us while His truth directs us, and we shouldn’t be intimidated when Scripture exposes our need for Him. Instead, we can trust that His grace abundantly covers us through Christ. Finally, we’re reminded never to abuse the grace God gives but to walk in the new life He calls us to live. May this message encourage you to embrace both His grace and His truth as they work together to transform your life.
This message explores the powerful truth that Jesus is our atonement and the only one who makes us right with God. Drawing from Romans 3:23-26, we walk through the deep need for atonement, what it truly means, and what it accomplishes for us through the sacrifice of Christ. From the reality of sin and separation to the beauty of redemption, reconciliation, and righteousness, this teaching highlights how Jesus did not simply offer a sacrifice but became the sacrifice. His blood covers, cleanses, restores, and removes the barrier between us and God. Through Him we stand forgiven, free, and fully accepted. Jesus is our atonement, and through His finished work we are brought into new life and lasting peace with God.
Jesus is our High Priest, the One who entered heaven on our behalf and secured our redemption forever. Scripture shows us that He is seated in authority, sympathetic to our weaknesses, and fully present with us in every struggle. And through His sacrifice, He has made us a kingdom of priests, called to minister to God, serve others, bless them, and help reconcile people back to Him. This message explores what it means that Jesus is the Highest Priest and what it means for us to live as His priests in our world today.
Jesus is the Head of the Church, the true Leader and life source of His body. Ephesians 1:19-22 reminds us that God placed all things under His authority for the benefit of the church. He owns it, builds it, and holds it together. Through Him, every part grows strong and full of love, because everything we do flows from Him.
This week’s message reminds us that real fruit doesn’t come from chasing dreams but from growing deeper in Christ. Your dream is not fruit; your maturity in Him is. Visitors don’t mature—abiders do. There are real consequences to not abiding, but those who remain in Him bring joy to His heart. This post was inspired by a prophetic prayer shared by one of our prayer team members this week, calling us back to stay connected to the Vine and let our lives bear lasting fruit.





Amazing message on insecurity that God spoke out loud to me about. Pastor Preston gives really great reminders of how to deal with it and why we feel this way sometimes.