As we step into a new year, this message from Genesis 22 asks a simple but powerful question: what do you really worship, and what do your everyday choices show you trust most? Through the story of Abraham and Isaac—and how it points to Jesus—we see that worship isn’t just about singing, but about choosing trust over control and discovering that God Himself is the greatest gift.
This Christmas reflection traces humanity’s darkness from Genesis to the present, revealing Jesus as the Light who doesn’t rescue us from afar but enters our depths, takes our place, and becomes the solid ground beneath our feet. It calls us to release the false driftwood we cling to and live in hope between Christ’s first coming and His promised return, trusting the One who is both our substitute and our rescuer.
At Christmas, we discover that love is not shallow or convenient but deeply personal and profoundly costly, revealed through the Incarnation—God with us. In Jesus, God draws near and pays the ultimate price for us, inviting us not only to believe we are truly beloved, but to live transformed by that same self-giving love toward others.
This Advent reflection explores the tension between the biblical call to rejoice always and the very real experience of pain and depression, pointing us to Psalm 16:11 where true joy is found in God’s presence. Rather than denying suffering, we discover that joy is not a feeling to chase but a Person we encounter—Jesus, who meets us in our vulnerability and walks with us through the mess.
This message reminds us that peace isn’t something we can buy or manufacture—it’s a Person, the Prince of Peace, who offers true shalom that makes us whole. By exposing the lies we believe, the sin we hide, and the pain we avoid, it invites us to come to Jesus Himself—the only One who can heal what’s broken and give us real, lasting peace.
This message invites us to explore Advent hope through the stories of Zechariah and Elizabeth and of Mary and Joseph, showing how their impossible promises, honest questions, and seasons of waiting reveal the depth of personal, messianic, and eternal hope. It reminds us that God includes us in His purposes—not ignoring our needs but meeting them through community, Scripture, and the rhythms that root us in Jesus’s story, even when our prayers feel unanswered.
The Book of Ruth closes by showing that redemption isn’t something we create for ourselves, but something God provides—costly, relational, and rooted in real time and space. In Ruth 4, Boaz’s redemption of Naomi and Ruth points us to Jesus, whose love not only saves us but shapes generations, inviting us into a relationship that transforms our lives and others’.
This message explores Ruth 3 and the profound Hebrew idea of hesed—God’s covenantal care expressed through sacrificial love—revealing how His faithful provision meets us in seasons of waiting, uncertainty, and need. Through Ruth, Naomi, and Boaz (a foreshadowing of Christ), we’re challenged to trust God’s daily care and to extend His comfort to others as we first learn to receive it ourselves.
Ruth 2 shows God’s heart for outsiders through Ruth’s encounter with Boaz, who goes beyond obligation to offer protection, dignity, and hesed love. The story challenges us to welcome those unlike us, revealing that God’s favor comes not from what we’ve done but from who He is—and inviting us to make room at our own tables.
In Ruth 1, we see Naomi’s bitter return to Bethlehem and Ruth’s bold declaration of faith reveal what it means to come back to God when life has fallen apart. Through their story, we’re reminded that God’s covenant love welcomes us home—not when we have it all together, but right in the midst of our grief and surrender.
This message reminds us that Jesus isn’t just coming someday—He’s already on His way, and that reality should shape every choice we make. Drawing from Revelation 22 and 1 Corinthians 3, it challenges us to live faithfully now, knowing that while salvation is by grace, the quality of our lives will echo into eternity.
In this message from John 4, we explore Jesus’ encounter with the Samaritan woman and how it reveals His heart to cross barriers and meet us in our deepest need. We're reminded that the living water He offers satisfies far beyond what the world can give, inviting us to let Him transform our hearts from the inside out.
This message dives into Acts 2:42–47, showing how the early church’s way of living flowed from truly knowing Jesus’ sacrificial love. It invites us to do the same—to live changed lives that are honest, open, and full of grace, so others can experience God’s love through us.
We’re exploring our mission to share the gospel and our lives with everyday people until Christ returns—the good news that Jesus came to rescue us from sin, death, and despair, bringing forgiveness for our past, purpose for our present, and hope for our future. As we remember how He came to bring good news to the poor and set the captives free, we’re challenged to love others enough to step into the “water” and share this life-changing message with them.
Are we truly embracing our calling as ambassadors for Christ? This message from 2 Corinthians 5 reminds us that all who are in Christ are new creations with a ministry of reconciliation, called to be God’s co-workers—compelled by the fear of the Lord and the love of Christ—to share the gospel in our everyday lives, even when we feel discouraged, knowing that God is still working behind the scenes.
We’re reminded from 1 Thessalonians 2 and Acts 17 that opposition in our faith doesn’t mean we’re outside God’s will—often it means we’re right in the center of it, just as the early disciples faced persecution yet boldly shared the gospel. As people entrusted with the good news, we’re challenged not only to proclaim it but to live it authentically, offering both the gospel and our lives in a way that demonstrates our hope in Christ
We explored the spiritual power of remembering as Moses calls the Israelites—and us—to recall the wilderness, God’s faithfulness, and our own tendency to forget. By reframing the wilderness as a place of intimacy and dependence on God, it challenges us to see our struggles not as punishment, but as training grounds for deeper faith.
Have we truly grasped the profound meaning of baptism? More than a ritual, it is a transformative experience of identity, reality, and mystery—uniting us with Christ in His death and resurrection, reminding us through Matthew 28 and Romans 6 that we are beloved children of God called to live as new creations.
In our journey of faith, we often struggle to share the good news of Christ, but Luke 12 gives us three keys to overcome hesitation: cultivating a healthy fear of God that brings boldness, trusting the Spirit’s guidance over our own scripts, and living with urgency in light of Christ’s return. These truths challenge us to step out in faith, trusting God to equip us so we can confidently and authentically witness to His transformative work in our lives.
We are challenged to examine our hunger for God’s presence, reminding us through Pentecost in Acts 1–2 that revival begins where people are repentant, obedient, and ready for His fire to fall. We’re invited to renew our desperation for Him, creating space in our lives to become altars prepared for His transforming presence.