The Plan Actually Works
You'll see how the vision in Revelation 7 serves as the final proof that God's rescue plan for every nation isn't wishful thinking, and why that future should change what you do today.
Topic
60 sermons in the archive.
You'll see how the vision in Revelation 7 serves as the final proof that God's rescue plan for every nation isn't wishful thinking, and why that future should change what you do today.
You'll hear how Pentecost was not just a spiritual event but a precise historical moment when God used Roman roads, a crowd of pilgrims, and a group of unremarkable Galileans to launch an unstoppable information explosion, and what that means for how you carry the gospel today.
You'll see how the long, messy history of failed human kings in the Old Testament wasn't a detour in God's plan but the very thing that makes the promise of a different kind of king, one who won't crush the weakest reed, so striking and so specific.
You'll see why Genesis 15 is one of the most pivotal chapters in the entire Bible, and how God's ancient covenant with Abraham points directly to why faith, not performance, is what makes a relationship with God possible.
You'll hear why welcoming the immigrant as a temporary guest falls short of what Jesus actually demanded, and what it looks like to treat a stranger as an irreplaceable member of your own body.
You'll hear a direct challenge to the habit of sorting people into 'neighbors' and 'others,' and why Jesus identifies himself specifically with the people you'd least want at your door.
You'll hear why Jesus had no reason to be baptized yet stepped into the river anyway, and what his choice to identify with broken humanity means for the moments when you feel too far gone, too ordinary, or too weak to be of use to God.
You'll hear how two missionaries from Colombia built 23 years of work in Mexico by treating faith, health, justice, and healing as inseparable, and what it looks like to serve a community without pressure to convert.
You'll hear Jesus make an uncomfortably direct claim: that following him requires a total commitment that puts every other loyalty, including family and self, in second place, and you'll be invited to sit with what that actually costs before deciding whether to keep walking.
You'll hear why the Bible preserving conflicting voices (two creation accounts, Leviticus and Isaiah pulling in opposite directions) is not a problem to solve but an invitation to expand how you understand God, your neighbors, and yourself.
You'll hear how God was already at work in Lydia's life before Paul said a word to her, and what that means for the conversations you're avoiding because you don't feel ready to have them.
You'll hear how God dismantled a deep cultural barrier in the early church by declaring certain foods clean, and what that means for the traditions you hold that might be keeping others at arm's length.
You'll hear how Saul's violent certainty was stopped cold on a road to Damascus, and what that kind of sudden, unwanted transformation might mean for the places in your own life where you're still standing on the wrong rug.
You'll see how Isaiah's vision of a sovereign, unshakeable God speaks directly to the moments when human leadership fails you, and what it means to respond to a king who cleanses rather than condemns.
You'll hear why Jesus chose a passage about poverty and captivity to launch his entire ministry, and what it means that he deliberately left out the part about destroying his enemies.
You'll see why Jesus grounds the call to forgive not in what the other person deserves, but in the staggering debt that has already been canceled on your behalf, and what that shift in motivation actually makes possible.
You'll come away understanding why one church community can hold together people with genuinely different views on baptism, communion, and women in ministry, and what the theological logic is that makes that possible without everything falling apart.
You'll hear teenagers fresh from a summer youth conference reflect honestly on what it means to truly rest, to step outside your comfort zone, and to let Psalm 23 become more than a familiar poem.
You'll get a clear map of how Christianity's major traditions, from Eastern Orthodox to Evangelical Covenant, grew out of the same root, and why those splits were costly but not necessarily all wrong.
You'll come away knowing the key theological differences between Christianity and three major groups that claim to be Christian, and with a short, clear way to explain what you actually believe if someone ever shows up at your door.
You'll learn what Jesus actually modeled when he was rejected by the people who knew him best, and how his instructions to the disciples offer a practical way to share your convictions without being crushed when they aren't received.
You'll hear why the Christian experience of 'choosing' faith may be only part of the story, and what it means to consider that the Spirit was working in your life long before you were aware of it.
You'll come away with a clearer picture of what it actually means to live as a Christian in a world that doesn't share your values: not by retreating from it, not by fighting it, but by loving it the way God does, at real cost to yourself.
You'll hear how a psalm that begins with the cry of abandonment ends with a vision of every nation on earth finding their way back to God, and what that arc means for how you live and who you consider worth caring about.
You'll hear how Paul's decision to give up his right to payment unlocks a practical principle: the things we're most entitled to are sometimes the very things that block others from hearing what we most want them to hear.
You'll hear why Jonah's reluctant mission to his enemies is also the story of why human societies keep cycling through the same failures, and what it means that God finally broke that cycle rather than waiting for us to get it right.
You'll hear why not knowing when Jesus will return is actually the point, and what it looks like to live with urgency and hope when you can't calculate a deadline.
You'll hear a fresh reading of the Parable of the Talents that shifts the focus from productivity to risk, and what it means to hold loosely the gifts you've been given rather than protecting them out of fear.
You'll hear why Jesus told a story about a king's wedding feast to challenge who gets into God's kingdom, and what it means to actually show up with the right heart rather than just going through the motions.
You'll hear the story of a nearly-derailed founding meeting in 1885 Chicago, and what the way those Christians handled conflict and disagreement reveals about how a church can hold both conviction and openness without sacrificing either.
You'll hear why the parable of the sower is really about a recklessly generous God who keeps giving without calculating whether the ground is ready, and what that means for the places in your own life that still feel like hard or rocky soil.
You'll see how Thomas — far from being a failure of faith — models exactly what it looks like to bring your hardest questions to Jesus and find him already waiting there to meet you.
You'll come away with a concrete way to think about where you fit in the work of a faith community, whether you're someone who opens doors, plants a quiet seed, walks alongside a searching friend, or brings someone to the moment of decision.
You'll hear why Jesus called this parable the turning point of all human history, and what it means that God stopped sending messengers and sent his son instead.
You'll hear why God's call to Abraham was never meant to single out one group as special, but to set in motion a plan to bless every people on earth, and why that purpose still shapes what it means to follow God today.
You'll hear why Jesus deliberately withheld things from his closest followers, and what that pattern of being broken down and rebuilt means for the challenges you sense God is preparing you for right now.
You'll hear why a first-century Pharisee's pragmatic advice to 'wait and see' is actually a word of freedom for anyone who feels the weight of trying to make the gospel succeed on their own.
You'll hear why the demographic shifts already reshaping American society demand that churches stop defaulting to comfortable, mono-ethnic patterns, and what it actually takes, in practice, to become a community that reflects the global body of Christ.
You'll hear why Jesus stopped everything to heal one ignored man on the road to Jerusalem, and what that moment reveals about the lies our culture tells about who matters and why telling the truth is itself a form of spiritual warfare.
You'll see how much Abram had lost and settled into before God called him to leave, and that picture may help you name what's holding you back from the next thing God is asking of you.
You'll hear a concrete argument that what captures your attention is literally shaping who you are becoming, and discover how a single verse from Psalm 34 offers a different kind of formation in a culture engineered to exhaust you.
You'll hear what Pentecost was actually for, not just a miracle of languages but a strategic moment when God launched a worldwide movement through ordinary people, and what that means for how you carry the gospel in your own corner of the world.
You'll see how a single conversation on a desert road carried the gospel hundreds of miles without anyone having to travel there, and why the people already in your neighborhood might be that same kind of opportunity.
You'll hear an honest confession about hating fellow believers across political lines, and a challenge to take seriously the idea that God might be speaking through people you've already dismissed.
You'll hear why the opening verses of John's Gospel are not just a poetic prologue but a claim that God has always chosen to move toward chaos rather than away from it, and what that means for the darkest places in your own life and in the lives of people you love.
You'll see how Luke deliberately zooms in from the whole Roman Empire down to one obscure family on the road, and why that narrowing down to the smallest possible place is exactly the point of Christmas.
You'll hear why the parable of the wedding banquet is actually a story of radical inclusion, and what it means for you to carry an invitation to people on the margins rather than assume you already have a seat at the table.
You'll hear how God's word moves through broken, reluctant people to reach the people they least want to help, and what that means for the moments you feel unqualified or unwilling to speak up.
You'll hear how Jonah's refusal to go to his enemies holds a mirror up to the church's own tendency to stay comfortable, and why the Hebrew phrase 'vayehi' points to those rare moments when God breaks through and asks something specific of you.
You'll see how Paul's decision to work a day job and refuse payment wasn't about money at all, but about removing every possible barrier between people and the gospel, and what that same posture might cost you.
You'll come away with a concrete, three-step practice for bringing genuine care to your coworkers, and a fresh reading of the Great Commission that makes you a participant in it right where you already are.
You'll hear why Paul insists the church must hold its own members to account while staying genuinely engaged with people outside it, and what happens to a congregation that gets those two things backwards.
You'll hear why real unity in a church or community isn't just a social goal but is rooted in the gospel itself, and what jealousy, factions, and immaturity actually cost the people around you.
You'll hear why the Christian faith keeps tripping up both insiders and outsiders, and what it actually looks like to stop reaching for power and start aligning yourself with a crucified Christ.
You'll hear how the first Pentecost was a precisely timed act of global reach, and what Joel's promise that God 'repays the years the locusts have eaten' might mean for time you feel you've wasted or lost.
You'll hear how Jesus' final words before leaving earth were actually an offer of second chances to the world, and what it looks like when the Holy Spirit does the talking through you instead of you scrambling to find the right words.
You'll see how Paul, exhausted and culturally disoriented in Athens, found a way into genuine conversation with people whose beliefs were nothing like his own, and what that approach might look like for you when faith-sharing feels awkward or unwelcome.
You'll hear how Luke, an outsider who never met Jesus, became one of the most important voices in the New Testament, and what his method of careful, honest investigation means for how Christians should engage the world today.
You'll hear why Saul's violent hatred of early Christians wasn't simple cruelty but a desperate defense of his identity, and what his transformation suggests about how any of us resist, and eventually yield to, change we can't stop.
You'll hear why Jesus says 'I never knew you' to people who spoke and acted in his name, and what it actually means to build a life on something that holds when everything falls apart.