In-person services may be cancelled for this morning, but we can still worship and learn together. We kick off our new series Matthew: Kingdom Mission this morning as we just back into the book of Matthew, looking at chapter 10.
In-person services may be cancelled for this morning, but we can still worship and learn together. We kick off our new series Matthew: Kingdom Mission this morning as we just back into the book of Matthew, looking at chapter 10.
Worship with us and take in part 6 of Make Love, Not War… our series on reconciliation. Johnathan steps into the topic of racial reconciliation and how we all need to take steps in our lives to walk further into this important topic.
Today, we discuss the difference between forgiveness and reconciliation. While they’re both similar, they’re very different and it’s important to understand the requirements and caveats of both. If you need to catch up on last week’s message first, you can listen to part 2 here.
Join us for Sunday service on December 13th. We’ll talk about what it means to be the church even if we’re not gathering, we’ll learn about the next part of our Advent Conspiracy project and Johnathan will start “The Light is Here” Christmas series.
Today’s message looks at Matthew 8:18-22 and two disciples offering too much and too little to Jesus. We have to remember that following Jesus is about the mission, not the method. Basically, church isn’t about our own preferences, it’s about our relationship with Jesus.
Join us for worship and as Johnathan speaks on Matthew 8:5-13, looking at Jesus’s healing of the centurion’s servant.
We have hope because God is radically committed to developing our character.
I have hope because my life is not dependent on my circumstances.
The next part of our What & Why series talks about another reason as to why we have hope in God… God provided restoration through Jesus Christ.
We continue with our What & Why series… answer grounded in hope and faith. We have hope because of so many reasons, but this morning, Johnathan explores the fact that we have hope because we have meaning and purpose.