Gratitude is powerful, but it is not meant to sit still. It is meant to move. This week we are looking at how gratitude grows when it turns into action. When we receive something good and let it change how we show up for others, joy expands. When we keep it to ourselves, it fades.
We will explore how a thankful heart reshapes the way we see our possessions, our work, and the people in our lives. Many of us live with a low-level fear that there will never be enough. Yet something shifts when we choose to give our time, attention, money, or presence. The world feels larger. Our hearts feel lighter.
If you need a reset or want to learn how to live with a deeper sense of abundance, check out this teaching. It might be the spark you need to move from receiving to giving and from fear to joy.
Real gratitude isn’t pretending life is fine when it’s not—it’s learning to see God’s presence right in the middle of tension, disappointment, and waiting.In this teaching, we’ll explore what it means to live The Grateful Life. Not gratitude as denial, but as defiance. Jesus gave thanks before the breakthrough, on the very night He was betrayed. That’s the kind of gratitude that changes how we suffer and how we hope.Join us as we learn to give thanks not just in the tension, but even for it, trusting that God is shaping something sacred in the struggle.
We’re beginning a new series called The Grateful Life and in this message, we’re naming the hidden force that keeps us restless: discontent.Our culture runs on comparison and consumption. Every ad, every scroll, every “next thing” whispers the same lie: you don’t have enough. But what if the first step toward gratitude isn’t forcing ourselves to be thankful, but recognizing how this lie shapes our habits, our marriages, and even our faith?Jesus slept through a storm not because he was unaware, but because he was unafraid. Gratitude doesn’t ignore reality, it resists being consumed by it.
In a world that profits from your dissatisfaction, gratitude becomes an act of rebellion, a way of saying, “What God has given is enough for today.”Join us for this teaching as we learn to live with open hands and peaceful hearts in a culture of scarcity.
Josh Siders teaches about God the Father, who is present with us, on Father's Day.
Josh Siders begins a new series on God's heart for us.
Mosaic Church celebrates relocating to a new worship space and all the work of our community to get there.
What would it do to your soul if you took 52 sabbaths in this next year? How would your life look different--including the stress you carry and the anxiety you feel? It's possible, through some planning and preparation, to enter into a life filled with more peace, calm, and rest while spending more time with the people you enjoy most.
Pastor Josh Siders continues our Radical Jesus series by talking about sexual formation--that God wants to form us mentally, emotionally, spiritually and, yes, sexually. But what does that look like for us? Watch along and find out what that grace-filled journey looks like.
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Josh Siders continues our teaching series about controversial topics, Radical Jesus, by talking about the mistreatment and abuse church community can experience from unhealthy leaders.
Pastor Sarah Siders talks about mental health and well-being for our Radical Jesus series. Drawing upon her years as a therapist, she shares from her perspective on integrating holistic health and how followers of Jesus can embrace this approach.
Pastor Josh Siders talks about digital and social media use, its effects on use, and how we can think about how our families can use it while minimizing its harm.
Pastor Ben Deaver addresses refugees and immigrants and how we think of their inclusion in our country, all while viewing it from the perspective of the Kingdom of God.
Pastor Josh Siders teaches on American politics as it relates to the Kingdom of God and following Jesus.
Pastor Josh Siders begins our Radical Jesus series by teaching about the cross-pressures of the cultural moment we find ourselves in and how we can practice curiosity towards others and intentionally choose relationships with others instead of deepening the divide.
Pastor Josh Siders wraps up our series on community with a teaching about three key habits for growing in healthy relationships.