DiscoverCedar Point Recovery - Weekly Messages
Cedar Point Recovery - Weekly Messages
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Cedar Point Recovery - Weekly Messages

Author: Pastor Aaron Shaw

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Cedar Point Recovery is a ministry of Cedar Point Church. We are a Christ centered recovery program where we believe that a relationship with Jesus is essential to finding success on the road to recovery. We believe that we are not powerless in our situations and with the help of Jesus, the ultimate story changer, we have the ability to change.

We look forward to journeying with you on your road to recovery!

Connect with Cedar Point Recovery
FACEBOOK: @CPCRecovery
INSTAGRAM: CedarPoint.Recovery
WEBSITE: www.cedarpoint.church
Email: Aaron@cedarpoint.church
261 Episodes
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Most of us spend our lives trying to prove we’re enough—working harder, doing more, hoping to earn approval. But the gospel flips the script. You don’t have to perform for God’s acceptance; Jesus already declared you righteous by grace through faith. You’re not working for approval anymore—you’re living from it.#ThisChangesEverything #NotGuilty #CedarPointRecovery #GraceOverPerformance
Join us for Keri Blackmar's testimony!
Most people are living half-asleep—distracted, comfortable, and unaware that eternity is closer than they think. But the truth is, time is short and the mission is urgent. God didn’t save you just to survive; He saved you to make a difference. This Monday at Cedar Point Recovery, we’re continuing our Wide Awake series with a message titled “Wake Up to the Mission.” Don’t drift through life on autopilot—rise up, step out, and live like eternity is real. #WideAwake #CedarPointRecovery #WakeUpToTheMission
Most of us don’t even realize it, but we’re living in a war zone. Every day there’s a battle for your mind, your heart, your marriage, your sobriety, and your future. The problem? Too many of us are hitting snooze while the enemy is wide awake. This Monday at Cedar Point Recovery we’re starting a new series called Wide Awake with a message titled “Wake Up to the Battle.” Don’t drift through life half-asleep — it’s time to rise, armor up, and fight with the strength of Christ.
Your comeback isn’t complete until you celebrate it. Nehemiah shows us that true restoration ends in worship, gratitude, and testimony. Don’t just survive the rebuild—rejoice in it.
Repentance is not about staying stuck in guilt—it’s about walking in God’s grace. When the people heard the Word, their sorrow turned into joy, and their confession rebuilt their relationship with God. This week, let God awaken your heart, turn your sorrow into strength, and call you into a new way of living.
Cole Brown's Testimony

Cole Brown's Testimony

2025-09-0948:35

Join us for Cole Brown's Testimony!
Distraction is one of the enemy’s sharpest tools. Nehemiah refused to come down from the wall, and so must we. This week’s message—Boundaries That Guard the Work—will challenge you to protect what God is rebuilding in your life by saying “no” to distractions, standing firm in discernment, and walking with courage in the face of intimidation.
Opposition is inevitable when you step into obedience. Nehemiah shows us that the enemy mocks what God is rebuilding, hoping to wear us down with lies and intimidation. But instead of arguing, he responded with prayer and progress, refusing to come down from the wall. His people worked with a trowel in one hand and a sword in the other—building and battling at the same time. In the same way, recovery and discipleship require both defense and offense: guarding our hearts with God’s Word and building new habits that honor Him. The message is simple—stay on the wall, keep praying, keep building, and don’t let opposition pull you away from what God has called you to restore.
Burdens can either break you or build you—it all depends on where you take them. Nehemiah’s burden became a vision when he brought it before God and stepped out in boldness. Don’t let your pain turn to bitterness—let it fuel a rebuild.
Before Nehemiah rebuilt a single wall, he had to face the truth about what was broken. Jerusalem’s walls were in ruins, the gates burned, and the people living in shame. Restoration didn’t start with a construction plan—it started with honesty before God. The same is true for us. You can’t fix what you refuse to face, and you can’t heal from what you hide. This week at Cedar Point Recovery, we’re talking about how to face the truth about what’s broken, let God break our hearts for what breaks His, and start the rebuild in prayer. It’s time to stop stepping over the rubble and start letting God restore what’s been broken.
Confession isn’t a sign of weakness—it’s where healing truly begins. We don’t get free by pretending we’re okay; we get free when we’re honest. You weren’t meant to carry your struggles alone. Healing flows through vulnerability, honesty, and community. Don’t let shame keep you silent—take the risk to confess and step into the restoration God is offering.
Join us as Amanda Johnson shares her incredible story of God's love and transformation.
In James 3, we’re confronted with the truth that our words aren’t neutral—they’re powerful. This passage walks through how the tongue, though small, can set the direction of our lives or burn everything down around us. It reminds us that no one can tame their speech without the help of the Holy Spirit. And it closes by showing us that wise, Spirit-led words always bring peace, not chaos. In recovery and in life, the way we speak can either push people further into shame or call them out into freedom. If God has your heart, then your words should reflect His character. Tonight, we’re getting real about the fire that lives between our teeth—and what it looks like when that fire is finally surrendered to God.Words don’t disappear when they’re spoken. They either plant something life-giving or light something on fire. The tongue may be small, but it can destroy relationships, wreck reputations, and derail recovery. But in God’s hands, your words can also bring healing, hope, and life. What you say reveals who’s in control—your flesh or the Spirit. If your faith is real, your mouth should reflect it.
Pride keeps you stuck. Humility sets you free.So many of us feel spiritually distant not because God has moved, but because we’ve refused to. Pride builds walls, but humility builds bridges. The way forward in your healing isn’t pretending to be okay—it’s getting honest about where you’re not. Repentance doesn’t just bring forgiveness; it brings connection. The moment you drop the act and fall to your knees is the moment heaven leans in close. Freedom begins where pride ends.
James doesn’t sugarcoat anything in this passage. He goes straight to the heart of the matter: faith without works is dead. It’s not enough to claim belief in God if your life never reflects it. In recovery—and in discipleship—true faith shows up in obedience, sacrifice, and tangible action. Abraham offered his son. Rahab risked everything. And James says that if your faith doesn’t lead you to move, serve, surrender, or obey, then it’s not real faith—it’s just talk. This week, we’re digging into what active, alive, working faith looks like—and how to take one bold step that proves your faith is more than just words.Talk is cheap. Real faith shows up in real life.Faith that works is faith that walks—it doesn’t sit still, it doesn’t stay quiet, and it doesn’t just show up on Sundays.If your faith never moves you to action, it may not be faith at all.This week we’re asking: What does your faith do?
In James 2:1–13, we’re reminded that grace doesn’t play favorites—and neither should we. This message confronts the sin of favoritism and its impact on how we treat others in recovery, in church, and in life. When we judge based on appearance, status, or reputation, we distort the very gospel we claim to believe. James calls us back to the heart of Jesus—a Savior who welcomed the broken, the overlooked, and the outcast. God chooses the unexpected, and His mercy levels the playing field. If we’ve received grace, we’re called to extend it. In a culture that divides and cancels, the church is called to create a place of belonging where mercy overrules judgment.Pride and prejudice have no place in recovery.Grace doesn’t play favorites—and neither should we.At the foot of the cross, we’re all the same.✝️ James 2:1–13#FaithInAction #CedarPointRecovery #GraceLevelsTheGround
In Week 2 of Faith in Action, we unpacked James 1:19–27 and confronted a hard truth: it’s not what we hear that changes us—it’s what we do with what we hear. James challenges us to be quick to listen, slow to speak, and slow to get angry, reminding us that real growth begins when we slow our reactions and humble our hearts. We were called to clear out the junk—pride, sin, distractions—so God’s Word can take root in our lives. And most importantly, we were reminded that faith isn’t proven by words or knowledge, but by obedience. It’s time to stop nodding in agreement and start living what we say we believe. God isn’t after your knowledge—He’s after your obedience.Truth transforms when it’s applied.
In Week 1 of our Faith in Action series, we opened the book of James with a bold challenge—to stop running from trials and start growing through them. James doesn’t sugarcoat the journey of faith. He calls it a battle—and he makes it clear that trials aren’t signs of God’s absence but tools for our transformation. We learned that trials are training grounds designed to build endurance, that temptation isn’t the same as sin—we have a choice in how we respond—and that God’s goodness doesn’t shift when life gets hard. This message pushes us to quit escaping and start enduring, knowing that God is doing His deepest work when the pressure is on. Recovery isn’t about ease—it’s about faith forged in the fire.Faith isn’t built in the easy—it’s forged in the fire.Trials don’t mean God is absent. They mean He’s working.🔥 This week’s message: Built Through the Battle🎧 Catch up now and let God turn your pressure into perseverance.#FaithInAction #RecoveryChurch #BuiltThroughTheBattle
Recovery isn’t just hard—it’s warfare. And too often, we’re exhausted not because we’re weak, but because we’re fighting the wrong battle with the wrong weapons. In Ephesians 6, Paul reminds us that our struggle isn’t against people, pasts, or emotions—it’s against a spiritual enemy with real strategies. But God hasn’t left us unarmed. He’s given us the armor of truth, righteousness, peace, faith, salvation, and His Word. This message calls us to stop shadowboxing, suit up daily, and start fighting from our position in Christ. The battle is real, but so is the victory—and it’s time we fought like we believe it.
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