This week we close the book of Acts by watching Paul show us what long-obedience looks like.
Acts 20 confronts us with a choice: pursue comfort, or follow the Spirit into a life that actually counts. Paul shows us three shifts—Spirit-leadership, sacrificial suffering, and self-denial, calling us to one urgent invitation: don’t waste your life.
This week, Dr. Bryan Loritts preaches through Acts 19, helping us see how even good things can become idols when made into ultimate things.
When life gets hard, it’s easy to think the answer is to leave. But in Acts 18, Jesus shows Paul—and us—the power of staying. What if the greatest impact for God’s kingdom happens not by going, but by staying?
In a city filled with idols and ideas, Paul models how to share Jesus with skeptical hearts. Acts 17 shows us that the gospel meets people where they are, names their longings, and calls them to turn and believe.
In Acts 16, we learn four small acts that lead to a big move of God.
In a world marked by division, the church is called to be different. This week, we’ll learn to build a unified church marked by grace, mission, and sacrificial love.
In Acts 14, we uncover four practical steps to confidently share your faith—by seeing the overlooked, identifying idols, pointing to Jesus, and enduring with gospel-grit and mission.
In this episode, we dive into Acts 11–13 and the Church in Antioch—a Spirit-led, mission-driven community where ordinary people did extraordinary things. Discover four powerful signs of God’s hand on a church.
In a time of darkness and opposition, Acts 12 reminds us that God's good purposes are unstoppable and His power is unleashed through prayer. This message brings confrontation, comfort, and courage to follow Jesus boldly—no matter the cost.
This week, Bryan Barley gives the church a word about being wary of cynicism in a growing church, and continues on our series working through Acts 11.
Acts 10 confronts us with the radical inclusivity and exclusivity of Jesus. All are welcome into God’s kingdom, but there is only one way in—through Christ alone.
Jonah 4 shows that God is more patient, kind, and compassionate than we could ever imagine. Though Jonah resents God’s mercy for Nineveh, the Lord reveals His heart for the lost—and invites us to extend His compassion to others.
Jonah 3 reveals a God of second chances—grace for rebels and rule-followers alike. Don’t hide in rebellion or religion. Turn to the God who runs toward both.
Jonah’s lowest point became the turning point. Swallowed by a big fish, he discovered what we all have to: idols fail, but God’s grace never quits. Salvation belongs to the Lord—stop your running and return.
When we run from God, it’s always conscious, costly, and crazy. But the storm He sends is not to pay us back—it’s to bring us back. Stop running and return to Jesus, our greater Jonah and perfect substitute.
God speaks, sends, and shows surprising grace—even to enemies. This week we begin a new series about how Jonah ran, but Jesus obeyed.
In this message from Ephesians 6:10–19, Pastor Mike unpacks prayer as the secret weapon of the Christian life. Discover why prayer is powerful, why it’s so hard, and how to pray in a way that actually changes things.
This week, Casey Withers continues our series "When discipleship gets difficult", helping us understand the sword of the Spirit and the importance of Gods word in our lives as followers of Jesus.
This week, Pastor Jonathan Hunt leads us through a deep and practical exploration of Ephesians 6:17, focusing on the helmet of salvation as part of the full armor of God. With insight and clarity, he reminds us that the battlefield of spiritual warfare often begins in the mind—where fear, doubt, and deception seek to take root.