This message teaches that we often see life through a small, limited perspective, but God sees the full widescreen picture—just as shown through Joseph’s story, where years of hardship were part of a bigger plan for good. It challenges us to trust God even when we don’t understand, believing He is working behind the scenes in every season.
This message reflects on Jesus’ trial before Pilate, showing how humanity still trades God’s truth for personal comfort or desire—just as the crowd chose Barabbas over Jesus. It challenges us not to “horse trade” with God but to trust His truth and choose what our souls need most over what our feelings want now.
This message reflects on Jesus’ words in John 16, where He tells His disciples He will leave and then return, offering peace even as He promises trouble. It reminds us that while problems are guaranteed, peace is found only through surrender to Jesus—trusting Him not just with eternity, but with every part of life.
This message reflects on the story of Lazarus as a powerful sign of Jesus’ authority over death and a call to trust Him even when it seems unreasonable. It highlights Martha’s obedience in rolling away the stone and uses it as a picture of the faith required to act on God’s word despite fear or doubt. The message challenges listeners to let their faith cost them something—through patience, forgiveness, generosity, and integrity—turning belief into action. It closes by reminding us that salvation is free, but following Jesus means daily surrender and living with purpose.
This message teaches that Jesus’ delay in raising Lazarus shows us that faith is strengthened through waiting and testing, so that God’s glory and the truth of who Jesus is may be revealed more fully in our lives.
In John 6, after feeding the five thousand, Jesus tells the crowd that while they seek him for temporary bread, he alone is the true “bread of life” who can satisfy the soul and give eternal life. The message challenges us to stop chasing temporary things like anger, jealousy, lust, money, or self-image, and instead anchor our lives in Jesus, the only one who can truly save and satisfy.
In John 6:16–21, Jesus pursues his disciples by walking on the water in the midst of their storm, showing that he comes to us in our fear and chaos with mercy and presence. The message reminds us that just as Jesus pursues us, we are called to step into others’ storms, rowing alongside them in love and pointing them to the Savior.
In John 6:1–15, while Philip focused on the impossibility of feeding the crowd, Andrew simply brought a boy’s small meal to Jesus, showing the power of bringing what we have to him. The message teaches that God can multiply even our smallest offerings when surrendered with gratitude, turning them into blessings that impact others and advance his kingdom.
This message invites listeners to step into the story of John 5, where Jesus heals a paralyzed man, reminding us that Jesus comes to us even when we can’t move ourselves. It challenges us to move beyond what feels familiar and instead exercise bold faith, trusting that God still heals, helps, and responds to persistent prayer.
This message is a passionate and inviting call to action for the church to return to and embrace its core mission: helping people know and follow Jesus...