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Obedience

58 sermons on this topic

Walk Worthy of Your Calling

Walk Worthy of Your Calling

At a men's breakfast the speaker opens with his own life - his work in renovations, nearly fifteen years of marriage, and the long, painful road to his children, including the loss of two babies before God gave them a son. From there he calls every man to walk worthy of his calling (Ephesians 4:1), unfolding four spheres God entrusts to us: to serve, to work, to be a husband, and to be a father. On serving, he insists that calling unfolds step by step, so we must be faithful in small things rather than chase position. He gives three signs that God is calling us to a ministry: it fits our personality and gifts and feels natural rather than a burden, it bears fruit that blesses others, and even after burnout God keeps rekindling our motivation, like the fire shut up in Jeremiah's bones. On work, he reminds us that God made us to labor, that profession and calling are not opposites, and that a believer can serve God just as truly as a doctor, nurse, or businessman as from a stage. Turning to the family, he urges husbands to love their wives sacrificially, tracing love from eros to storge to philia to agape - the self-giving love Christ showed at the cross. Fathers, not only mothers, carry the weight of raising children, and a present father shapes them for good. He closes with a sober warning drawn from men who served God powerfully yet lost their families: guard the balance and stay faithful exactly where God has placed you.

God Is God: Faith That Trusts in the Dark

God Is God: Faith That Trusts in the Dark

This Sunday gathering brought three voices together around one thread - trusting God by faith. The first message opened with Jesus' words that we live not by bread alone but by every word from God, then asked plainly: what is faith? Drawing on Peter stepping onto the water, the shield of faith in Ephesians 6, and the disciples who could not free a tormented boy, the preacher described faith as full surrender - handing a situation completely to God and refusing to take it back through fear and worry. A visiting brother from Orlando turned to the cost of following Christ. Using Jesus' call to deny ourselves and take up our cross, Micah's charge to walk humbly with God, and Joshua's resolve that I and my house will serve the Lord, he reminded the church that Jesus warns us out of love because hard moments truly come, and that real discipleship means losing our life to find it in Him. The closing message was the most personal. A preacher shared the loss of his newborn grandson, who lived barely an hour and a half, while his son served on the front line of war. Out of that grief he proclaimed, from Genesis, Isaiah 40, Job 38 and Revelation 15, that God is God - unsearchable, always right, never obligated to explain Himself. Faith does not wait to understand before it obeys; it says, You are God, and that is enough, even through tears and unanswered questions.

Love God With All Your Heart, Soul, Mind and Strength

Love God With All Your Heart, Soul, Mind and Strength

Building on Mark 12:29-31, the preacher opens with Jesus' answer about the greatest commandment: love the Lord your God with all your heart, all your soul, all your mind and all your strength, and love your neighbor as yourself. The whole weight of the message rests on one little word - all. It is not enough to love God only with the heart, because He made us with heart, soul, mind and strength, and He asks for every part of who we are. He then walks through each dimension. The heart is the center of our feelings, desires and intentions: is God truly at that center, or is our faith merely formal and religious? The soul is our very life, which should long for God the way a deer pants for streams of water. The mind must be renewed by God's Word, tearing down the strongholds and worldly ideas that do not fit Scripture. And strength means real effort - genuine service tires us out, and if it never costs us anything, we may be holding back. Drawing on the parable of the talents, he warns against laziness and the false notion that doing less is somehow more spiritual. God wants us to use fully everything He gave us and to offer Him our best, not our leftovers. Because no one can love God this completely in their own power without burning out, he closes by calling the church to humble repentance and to ask for the grace God delights to give.

Why God's View Differs From Ours

Why God's View Differs From Ours

The preacher urges the church to pay close attention to God's word so it does not slip away from us (Hebrews 2:1; the parable of the sower). The heart of the message, drawn from 1 Samuel 16:7, is that God does not see the way people see: man looks at the outward appearance, but the Lord looks at the heart. Our trouble begins when we judge life by our own assumptions about how God should act. To show how seriously God weighs obedience, the sermon walks through five people who were close to God yet stumbled by treating His word lightly. Saul offered the sacrifice himself instead of waiting for Samuel and lost his kingdom. Moses struck the rock instead of speaking to it and failed to honor God's holiness. Samson revealed his secret and did not even realize the Lord had departed from him. Ananias and Sapphira lied to the Holy Spirit. The rich young man kept the commandments yet walked away grieved because his heart was bound to his wealth. In every case the person thought it was no big deal, while God saw it as deeply serious. The call is to draw nearer, to dig into Scripture rather than skim it, and to value His word exactly as He values it. When God says no, agree with His no; when He sets a high standard, keep it high. Like David, ask God to hold you back even from unintended sin and to turn you around when you stray.

The Measure of Christ's Gift

The Measure of Christ's Gift

This second part of the seminar centers on one truth from Ephesians 4: grace is given to each of us according to the measure of Christ's gift. The preacher urges believers to be content with whatever gift God has entrusted to them and to serve as faithful stewards, instead of resenting those who seem more visible or more gifted. He warns against taking up work God never assigned and then complaining that no blessing follows. Everything must stand in its proper place: God Himself calls each person individually, and the same God sets the boundaries of that calling. Trying to occupy someone else's role brings frustration, not favor. Drawing on the brief account of Shamgar in the book of Judges, who struck down six hundred Philistines with only an oxgoad, the message shows that God acts powerfully when we simply use what is already in our hand and stay where He has placed us. The story of a pastor friend who left a comfortable life in America to serve in Ukraine illustrates how a clear sense of calling can reshape an entire life.

The Sacred Calling of Preaching God's Word

The Sacred Calling of Preaching God's Word

Drawing on Romans 15:16, this seminar reframes preaching not as a casual stage moment but as a sacred, priestly act before God. Finishing his letter to the Romans, Paul sets aside his titles - apostle, prophet - and simply calls himself one who proclaims the gospel, using a Greek word rooted in temple service. To carry God's word to people is a high privilege: God Himself regards the preacher as someone doing holy work, which is why it can never be done carelessly or unprepared. With that privilege comes responsibility. Paul warned (2 Corinthians 2:17) that even in his day many corrupted the word of God. The servant of the word must deliver Scripture unchanged - explaining it, applying it, speaking firmly where God speaks firmly, never softening the truth to please listeners or apologizing for what God has said. The speaker contrasts this faithful proclamation with the modern drift toward motivational speakers who only flatter. The heart of the message is a call to serve God rather than to please people. Do your ministry knowing whom you serve (Colossians 3:23-24) and looking for your reward from the Lord alone (2 Timothy 4:8), not from applause, likes, or recognition. Real devotion shows in the unseen work of prayer and preparation done when no one is watching, and it always pushes a person to do more than duty requires.

The Measure of the Gift God Gave You

The Measure of the Gift God Gave You

Drawing on Paul's words about the measure of the gift of Christ, the preacher explains that every believer receives both a gift and a God-set scope for it - its reach, influence, and recognition. Two people can carry the same calling, yet one becomes known worldwide while another serves faithfully and stays unknown beyond their own community. That difference is set by God, not earned through self-promotion. The danger comes when we try to stretch the boundaries of our own gift, chasing publicity and forcing growth. He recalls churches obsessed with breaking the 200 barrier and contrasts them with a modest congregation that never passed a few hundred people yet raised and sent out dozens of ministers whose own churches grew into the thousands. Numerical size alone is not the measure of fruitfulness. Our responsibility is to give everything within the limits God assigned, not to expand them. We have no right to push past what God entrusted, but we can shrink our gift through laziness and stopped growth. The real question is whether we accept the portion God gave us, or secretly crave more.

A Clean Heart and a Faithful Example

A Clean Heart and a Faithful Example

The service opens with a reminder that only God's word renews and cleanses us. From 2 Samuel 22:31 we hear that God's way is perfect, His word is pure, and He is a shield to all who trust Him, while the story of King Jehoshaphat (2 Chronicles 20) shows worshippers placed ahead of the army because the battle belongs to the Lord. The first message turns to the heart. From Luke 6:45, out of the treasure of the heart the mouth speaks, bringing forth either good or evil. The hateful hearts of Joseph's brothers harmed both their brother and the flock their father had entrusted to them, while David guarded his father's sheep and risked his life for them. God has entrusted each of us with sheep of our own - children, family, those under our care. Like Daniel, who purposed in his heart not to defile himself, and David, who prayed for a clean heart, we are called to keep our hearts pure, for the pure in heart will see God. The second message holds up two fathers, Abraham and Lot. By faith Abraham obeyed and went out not knowing where, looking beyond his circumstances to the city whose builder is God. Lot chose by sight the well-watered plain near Sodom and lost everything, while Abraham left his descendants a lasting blessing. The closing challenge is searching: what example and what values do I pass on to my family? The prayers focus on fathers and on guarding our hearts and our children, especially during the Daniel fast.

Choose Each Day Whom You Will Serve

Choose Each Day Whom You Will Serve

This midweek service gathered the church to hear God's word together, opening with the prayer of Epaphras in Colossians 4:12 - that believers would stand complete and fully do the will of God. An older brother offered a Christmas greeting and reminded everyone that Christ is still being born today, in every heart that receives Him, asking whether we remember the day Jesus came into our own lives. He urged the church to search the Scriptures for themselves rather than simply trusting online preachers, and to live ready, since the Son of Man comes at an hour we do not expect (Luke 12:40). The main message, from Joshua 24:15, centered on the daily call to choose whom we will serve. The preacher taught that a godly past is no guarantee of a faithful future - each of us must keep choosing God day by day. Real conviction, drawn from past experience and grounded in God's word, shapes those choices, and serving the Lord is not one activity among many but an entire way of life. The service closed with Peter walking on the water (Matthew 14): while his eyes were on Jesus he walked, but when he looked at the storm he began to sink, and Christ immediately reached out to save him. The church was reminded that the Lord never leaves a struggling believer to drown, and was called to keep its gaze on Him through every storm.

Hear His Voice, Enter the Open Door

Hear His Voice, Enter the Open Door

The service opened with Psalm 143:10, where the believer prays, "Teach me to do Your will." The point is not that our obedience earns us a place as God's children, but the reverse: He has already become our God, and so it does not befit a child to live outside the Father's will. We may know Scripture and even preach it, yet knowing it is not the same as doing it, and for that we need the grace of God. The first message lingered on praise (Psalm 103) and on one recurring command from heaven: "Listen to Him." Moses, though learned in all the wisdom of Egypt, still asked the Lord to teach him; the man born blind received his sight simply by obeying Jesus' word; and Christ's sheep follow because they hear His voice. Not by might nor by power, but by the Spirit who teaches us and reminds us of all He has said. The second message turned to Noah's ark. People mocked him for years, but God shut the one and only door and saved his household. Christ is that door - the way, the truth, and the life - and as in the days of Noah the gospel still warns while the door of salvation stays open. Those who trust Him are sealed by His blood, their names written in the book of life, and they come to the Father not as strangers but as beloved children.

Why Christmas Glory Came to Lowly Shepherds

Why Christmas Glory Came to Lowly Shepherds

On the Sunday before Christmas the service opens by answering those who claim the Nativity is pagan or absent from Scripture. Matthew 1:18 states plainly that "the birth of Jesus Christ was" - so God coming to earth in human flesh is a biblical fact. When we grasp who was born, why He came, and what our lives would be without Him, we have every reason to celebrate. The main message walks through Luke 2:8-20 and asks why God's glory appeared not to priests or kings but to poor, ordinary shepherds. The answer is simple: God resists the proud and gives grace to the humble, a truth echoed in Zephaniah 3 and in "the simplicity that is in Christ" (2 Corinthians 11:3). Christ Himself modeled this, entering the world as a defenseless infant and living in quiet obedience. The shepherds leave us a pattern to follow. They did not delay but hurried to obey, they testified to others about what they had seen, and they went home glorifying and praising God. The preacher urges believers not to sink back into worry after the service but to keep their hearts tuned to praise for the gift of Jesus.

Come Closer to God in Every Season

Come Closer to God in Every Season

In the rush of the holiday season, this Sunday service called the church to step out of the world's busyness and into God's presence. Drawing on Psalm 73, the first message recalled how Asaph found peace only when he entered the sanctuary and understood his true end - the eternal home waiting with God. The closer we live to the Lord, the more He fills our lives; the farther we drift, the smaller He seems, like a distant plane that looks tiny only because of the space between. From Luke 5, a second message followed Jesus calling Simon Peter. After a fruitless night, Peter obeyed the simple word "at Your word I will let down the nets," and the catch was so great the boats began to sink. Yet the real miracle was not the fish but Peter's broken, humbled heart. God calls the obedient rather than the impressive, gives our ordinary work a higher purpose, and asks us to pour everything we have into His kingdom and follow Him completely. Finally, from Gethsemane in Luke 22, the service turned to Jesus in agony, sweating drops like blood, strengthened by an angel. Prayer was His way of life, never a last resort, and in His deepest pain He prayed more earnestly still, clinging to the Father instead of pulling away. The closing appeal was tender and personal: in seasons of suffering and fear, the only real choice is to draw nearer to God and pray harder, like a hurting child who holds tightly to a parent.

Leaving Worship with a Thankful Heart

Leaving Worship with a Thankful Heart

This Thanksgiving service opened with hymns of gratitude, thanking God for the sun, the rain, and daily bread, and for blessing the work of His people through another year. A short reflection reminded the congregation that we are always sowers: whether or not we stop to think about it, we plant something every single day, and a season of harvest is surely coming. The day became a celebration of what God has caused to grow in their lives and of the blessing that keeps going with them. The pastor then pressed a searching question: are you leaving this service with a heart that truly wants to give thanks? Recalling a Sunday school lesson, he noted that the children had learned to thank God even for things that are hard to be grateful for - the alarm clock that wakes us too early, and even taxes, since paying taxes means we have work, health, and the strength to rise. The real difference, he said, is not that believers rush to their jobs like everyone else, but that we never go alone: we go with the Lord and do everything as unto Him. The gathering closed with practical care for the fellowship meal - honoring guests, wasting no food, and remembering those at the back of the line - together with prayer for traveling families, for healing, and for an end to the war in Ukraine. The church then welcomed a new family, Vadym and Anya, into membership, giving thanks that God keeps adding people to His body.

Grace That Is Not in Vain

Grace That Is Not in Vain

From 1 Corinthians 15:10 the preacher draws out one repeated word - grace, which appears three times in just eighteen words and well over a hundred times across Scripture. Its meaning shifts with context, but here it points to God's special favor that gives a person the ability to accomplish something they could never claim as their own. Grace, he explained, is never a force that overpowers us against our will. God offers it, and each of us chooses how to respond. Paul could say his grace was not in vain because he received it and got to work, then quickly corrected himself - not I, but the grace of God. Grace turns empty when a gift is buried under excuses or twisted into a way to exalt ourselves and look down on others. The message closed with a direct call: ask God what grace He has entrusted to you - a voice, a skill, finances, a language - and put it to use for His glory and His church rather than to impress people. Whether that grace is wasted does not depend on God; it depends on you. The service ended with heartfelt thanks to everyone quietly serving with the gifts they have been given.

Knowing You Have Life in the Son

Knowing You Have Life in the Son

The service centered on a simple yet central truth from 1 John 5:11-13: God has given us eternal life, and that life is in His Son. The pastor pressed one question - do you know, today, that you are saved? Assurance matters now, because it settles where we will spend eternity, it fills the heart with God's peace and joy, and it changes how we live. Salvation is a gift we could never earn; like a drowning person pulled from the water, we are saved only because Christ reached out His hand. Eternal life is not only a future reward after death. Whoever has the Son has life already, here and now. To have the Son is not merely to know about Jesus but to live in living union with Him, like a branch joined to the vine. It is the witness of the Spirit in our own hearts, not someone else's reassurance, that makes us certain we belong to God. A visiting preacher carried the theme further: Jesus cannot be Savior unless He is truly Lord, so genuine repentance means surrendering our own will, plans, and resources to Him. He spoke soberly about healing - God heals and loves to heal, but not automatically and not by mere slogans; our bodies still groan under the curse, and real faith comes from hearing the Spirit and walking the path God has chosen. He urged the church to seek first God's kingdom and to want the Spirit's power in order to serve, not merely to feel blessed.

Receiving the Word and Praying God's Way

Receiving the Word and Praying God's Way

The midweek service opened with Isaiah 41:13 - God holds our right hand and says, "Do not fear, I will help you." The first message, "Our attitude to the Word of God," worked through the parable of the sower in Matthew 13. The seed by the path is snatched away by the evil one because the hearer listens but does not understand and treats the word carelessly. The seed on good ground takes root in a soft, prepared heart that hears and understands, and it bears fruit thirty, sixty, a hundredfold. Drawing on Proverbs 4, the preacher urged us to keep God's words inside our heart, for they are life and health to the whole body, and to guard the heart above all else. Like the Ethiopian official who needed someone to explain Scripture (Acts 8), and like the living word that pierces to the dividing of soul and spirit, the answer to the Word we hear is to offer ourselves as a living sacrifice and be transformed by the renewing of our mind (Romans 12). The second message turned to prayer. We must shape our view of prayer from all of Scripture, not from personal opinion. God is the author of prayer and is already inclined toward us, so prayer is taking hold of His readiness, not chasing an evasive God. Yet Jesus warned in Matthew 23 that hypocritical, showy prayer brings greater judgment: what matters is not merely that we pray but that we pray rightly, with the right motive. Prayer is not performance, empty repetition, a casual game, or rest - it is serious spiritual work and warfare that the enemy fiercely resists.

Trusting Jesus When You Don't Understand

Trusting Jesus When You Don't Understand

This communion service gathered the church to remember the suffering and death of Jesus and, even more, to celebrate the victory of His resurrection. Before the bread and cup, the congregation was called to prepare their hearts with the sacrifice of praise (Hebrews 13:15) and to ask God to cleanse them. The main message came from John 13, where Jesus washes the disciples' feet. When Peter refused, Jesus said, "If I do not wash you, you have no part with Me." Peter grasped at once that his very relationship with the Master was at stake and answered, "Then wash not only my feet but my hands and my head" - in other words, "I am all Yours." The preacher pointed out that these words came not amid dazzling promises but in a humble act of foot washing - no threats, no bargaining, only the question of whether the relationship would continue. From there came the challenge: how much do we value our relationship with Jesus, especially when He does something we cannot understand, stays silent, or lets pain linger for a long time? Communion is not merely eating bread and sipping wine; it is a personal declaration that He matters more than anything and that we will remove whatever stands between us and Him. A second pastor added that those forgiven much love much (Luke 7:47) - at the cross we see both grace we never earned and our ongoing need for Christ to keep washing us for a new life.

Discerning God's Will at the Crossroads

Discerning God's Will at the Crossroads

A visiting preacher, in the United States for over twenty years and now in town while his wife receives treatment for cancer, opens in Ephesians 5 and asks the church to pray for his family. He centers his message on Ephesians 5:15-17 - walk wisely, redeem the time, and understand what the will of the Lord is. Life, he says, is a series of crossroads where we must choose which way to turn, and the command to understand means we must not rush but discern whether a path truly comes from God. God guides through two sources: His Word, a lamp to our feet, and the Holy Spirit, who leads us into all truth. The preacher illustrates from his own life - a rushed car purchase he regretted, his wife's illness when three strangers independently pointed him to the same clinic, and an agonizing decision about moving his family. Instead of deciding alone, he laid two slips of paper before God and the congregation in prayer, and went out released and blessed. From Genesis 13 he warns against Lot, who chose the well-watered plain by the sight of his eyes and ended up raising his children among wicked men. Many people chase money and good jobs and lose their children. So bring every decision to God, weigh the consequences for your whole family, and ask the church to pray; when heaven approves, you will never weep over the choice.

Choose Life and Walk Closely With God

Choose Life and Walk Closely With God

The evening service opened with Hebrews 3:15 - "Today, if you hear His voice, do not harden your hearts" - and a reminder that God's word is always speaking and must be received not only with the ears but with the heart. From Deuteronomy 30 the preacher pointed to the choice God has set before every person since creation: life and death, blessing and curse. God's word is plain - choose life. Looking at Enoch who walked with God, Noah who found grace in God's eyes, and Job whom God could call blameless, he showed that God still notices hearts that belong to Him, and that even an impossible-looking calling becomes possible with His help. A second message turned to the rich young ruler in Mark 10. He asked the right question and received a clear answer, yet went away grieved because he was not ready to obey. We often seek God's will, the preacher warned, but are not always willing to accept it. The heart of the teaching then opened up prayer as fellowship - the Greek koinonia, simply time spent together with God. Like Jesus, who withdrew alone to pray, our prayer is deeply personal and can never be copied from someone else. Finally, prayer was described as an honest admission that we depend on God. To stop praying is to quietly claim independence from Him, which is exactly what the enemy wants. Just as we would never starve all week and binge only on Sunday, we cannot neglect daily fellowship with God. He alone is our rock and refuge (Psalm 62); pouring out our hearts to Him at all times keeps us free and alive.

Carrying the Fragrance of Christ

Carrying the Fragrance of Christ

The service opened with Joel 2:23 - just as the rain gives life to the ground, God's people gather to be fed and to receive the latter rain of the Holy Spirit. The first message, on the atmosphere and fragrance of God's kingdom, was drawn from 2 Corinthians 2:14-16: believers are the aroma of Christ wherever they go. God's kingdom is not found in golden domes, good equipment, or strong emotion, but inside a humble heart where the Holy Spirit dwells. We are saved not merely to reach heaven, but to bear fruit and carry that atmosphere into our families, workplaces, and the world, shining as lights in a corrupt generation. A practical warning followed: the fragrance of Christ can evaporate before we even reach home, the moment an offense or a sharp word takes over. Bad company corrupts good habits, so we must watch carefully what we absorb and what we give out, being transformed from glory to glory into the likeness of Christ. The second message, from Romans 12:1, called the church to present their bodies as a living sacrifice - living (giving God our whole life today, not only in some future crisis), holy (a clean vessel set apart from sin), and acceptable to God (anointed and sanctified by the Holy Spirit, like the oil poured on the Old Testament offerings). The congregation was invited to respond, Here am I, Lord, send me, and to consecrate their lives afresh.

Learning to Pray as the Bible Teaches

Learning to Pray as the Bible Teaches

This study calls us to build a biblical worldview of prayer rather than simply talk about it. Just as Christ prayed and taught on prayer, the apostle Paul was a man of constant, repeated prayer, interceding again and again for Timothy and for the churches in Ephesus, Rome, Philippi, Colossae and Thessalonica. Scripture mentions prayer hundreds of times, roughly in every hundredth verse, which shows how essential it is. Christianity without an active prayer life is damaged Christianity. We pray not because God lacks information, since He already knows everything, but because He commanded it and because prayer is how we keep fellowship with Him. Bringing the same request to God again and again is not a failure of faith; persistence is exactly what Paul modeled. On the question of how to pray, the Bible gives wide freedom. It shows people praying with raised hands, on their knees, bowing low, lying face down, standing, and even sitting, and it never makes any single posture a rule or a guarantee of an answer. So we should not judge one another by outward form, while still coming to God with genuine reverence and honor in the heart.

Give an Account of Your Stewardship

Give an Account of Your Stewardship

The service opened with a reminder that a real sermon is more than information a machine could assemble out of Scripture. A true word becomes rhema, a living word that the Holy Spirit presses into the heart and that touches each person personally. The church prayed that the Spirit, and not human wisdom or ability, would speak. Looking back like Samuel raising his Ebenezer stone, the preacher urged everyone to confess, "Thus far the Lord has helped us." From Luke 16:1-2, the parable of the steward summoned to give an account, the message pressed one truth: everything we hold - our ministry, our finances, our health, our time - is not ours but God's, and one day we must answer for how we managed it. Many drift through life killing time, never thinking that a day of accounting is coming. Drawing on Deuteronomy 15, Daniel 6, John 15, and the barren fig tree of Luke 13, the preacher warned that a fruitless life is in danger of being cut down. God allows some to lack so He can test whether those with health, time, and means will open their hands. He closed with a story from Ukraine of a family too poor to have even potatoes, and his own choice to act rather than hide behind excuses.

Living Worthy of the Name Christian

Living Worthy of the Name Christian

The preacher opens with a sobering picture: everything we gather in life, even millions, stays behind at the grave, and so do the names on our passport and headstone. Only one name goes with us into eternity - the name we earn by how we live. He calls it the new name Christ promises to give, the true identity without which no one enters the kingdom of heaven. Drawing on 2 Corinthians 3:2, he reminds the church that believers are a living letter, known and read by everyone around them. We are not invisible; people watch how we walk, speak, endure, react, and love one another. Each of us is either a good example or a stumbling block that pushes others away from the faith. Quoting Ephesians 4:1-2, he urges the church to walk worthy of their calling, in humility, gentleness, and patient love. The name people give us is earned by our actions: someone who keeps lying becomes a liar, someone who steals becomes a thief, and no pretty word can disguise it. He warns against the contradiction of humble pride, in which there is no holiness at all, and notes that even God names us by who we truly are - as when He called Job blameless and upright before Satan.

Don't Bury the Truth You Find

Don't Bury the Truth You Find

The evening opens with Proverbs 15:23, that a timely word brings joy. We come to God's house to receive answers for daily life, and an opening reflection recaps recent teaching: forgiveness sets us free, prayer brings wisdom, God's love gives life, and Jesus is the way. All of it calls us to become more like Christ, like silver refined until the Refiner can see His own reflection in it. The main message asks a piercing question: what do we do with the truth once God shows it to us? Too often we dig for an answer, finally find it, and then want to bury it again because it contradicts how we have been living. Using Matthew 19, where Jesus answers the Pharisees on divorce by pointing them back to God's design in Genesis, the preacher shows how even the disciples recoiled from God's high standard, saying it would be better not to marry. Revealed truth is given to be received and obeyed, not pushed aside. We are then invited to see the whole Bible as God's deliberate, complete message: 66 books, over a thousand chapters, hundreds of thousands of words, not a pile of verses to pick from at will. Chapter and verse divisions are a human convenience for finding the text, not the inspired thought of the author. Like museum visitors imagining meaning in a heap of garbage, believers can assemble a comfortable truth by choosing only the verses they like. Instead we must handle Scripture honestly and let it change us.

When God Does Not Answer Our Prayers

When God Does Not Answer Our Prayers

Built on Matthew 7:7-11, the main message reminds us that God is a loving Father who delights to give good gifts to His children. Yet there are times when we ask and do not receive the answer we hoped for, asking for one thing and being given another. The preacher named three honest reasons why this happens. First, unconfessed sin separates us from God (Isaiah 59), and we often treat Him like a genie in a bottle, coming only when we need something and forgetting to give thanks. Second, our own doubt holds us back; faith is a gift from God, and like the father in the Gospel we can pray, "Lord, help my unbelief." Third, we frequently ask for our own comfort rather than His will (James 4:3). Even the heroes of faith in Hebrews 11 did not receive the promise in this life, yet God prepared something better for them. Like a soldier who sees only his trench, we are not shown the whole picture, but God our General sees it all, so we are called simply to trust Him. Two further reflections followed: the Spirit of God (ruach) moves when His people do their part and are willing to pay a price, and in the spiritual battle the church must stand shoulder to shoulder, leaning on Jesus, the true Lion, rather than fearing an enemy who only roars.

Loving God Is the Greatest Commandment

Loving God Is the Greatest Commandment

The service opened with a sobering reminder: the songs we sing must match the way we actually live. When we declare "I live only for You" and "Glory to Him for everything," God may begin to test whether we truly mean it, allowing hard moments to see if our praise still holds. From there the preacher turned to the heart of the message: love is the foundation of everything in the Christian life. Drawing from 1 Corinthians 13, 1 John 4:16, and Jesus' answer in Matthew 22, he showed that loving God with all our heart, soul, and mind is the greatest commandment, and that every other command rests on it. A believer avoids sin not so much because he hates sin but because he loves God; the more we love Him, the less room and time remain for anything else. When love for God cools, the enemy easily draws our attention back toward sin. Love also transforms obedience and service. Jacob's seven years of hard labor felt like a few days because he loved Rachel, and in the same way love turns duty into delight. Jesus asked Peter "Do you love Me?" three times before saying "Feed My sheep," because serving without love is the worst thing a person can do. The call of the day was simple: ask God for a greater love for Him, because everything changes when love comes first.

Obeying God's Voice, Walking in the Spirit

Obeying God's Voice, Walking in the Spirit

This midweek service opened with a reminder that God is searching for faith. The centurion in Matthew 8 amazed Jesus with faith greater than any found in Israel, simply trusting His word, while the crowds who had heard the Sermon on the Mount remained unmoved. Without faith it is impossible to please God. The main message followed the prophet Jonah. Called to preach to cruel Nineveh, the capital of Israel's enemy, Jonah fled toward Tarshish in the opposite direction. Through the storm and three days in the great fish, God did not destroy him but turned him back and gave him a second chance, and a whole godless city repented. Like Jonah, we often hide from God's will, slipping into comfort, indifference, or earthly concerns, yet God patiently corrects us in love, because obedience is better than sacrifice and always leads to blessing. A second word centered on the Holy Spirit, promised through Joel and poured out at Pentecost. The Spirit gives power to witness and leads us into truth, and like a marriage this gift must be tended daily through prayer and fellowship so we can make wise choices amid a noisy world. The service closed with a call to go outside the camp bearing Christ's reproach, living as pilgrims who seek the city whose builder is God, and with prayers for a missionary children's home in Ukraine.

Created to Reflect God's Image

Created to Reflect God's Image

Brother Yaroslav shares the work of the House of Mercy ministry - baking bread, feeding the hungry, preaching the gospel in front-line areas, giving haircuts to the war-wounded in hospitals, and settling rescued people into missionary communities. He explains why he gives his life to this: twenty-two years ago God lifted him out of alcohol and drug addiction. He nearly died several times, and as he lay dying of tuberculosis he heard God say, "You will not die, but be healed." From Genesis 1:26 he teaches that we were made in God's image to reflect His love in everyday life. Quoting Romans 14:17, he says the kingdom of God is righteousness, peace and joy in the Holy Spirit, and we serve God simply by living a visible, godly life that spreads that peace to others. You can call yourself a Christian and still fail to reflect Christ, so he urges believers never to stay silent about God. A second preacher contrasts Saul and David. Saul disobeyed, made compromises, lost his sensitivity to the Holy Spirit, grew proud, blamed others and guarded only his image before people - so when giants came, he had no one to fight them. David stayed humble, repented on his knees, refused Saul's armor and faced Goliath in the name of the Lord. The call is clear: be like David, not Saul, and let people see real faith in how you reflect God.

For Whom Do We Live?

For Whom Do We Live?

The first message opens with Solomon's question from Ecclesiastes 3: what does a person gain from all their toil? With all his wisdom Solomon saw that nothing under the sun is permanent - everything is temporary. Yet God has made everything beautiful in its time and set eternity in the human heart. Work is a good thing, but it is not the whole of life; we are not meant to burn out chasing achievements, approval, or wealth that can never truly satisfy. The answer is to do everything for the Lord. Jesus invites the weary, "Come to Me, all who labor, and I will give you rest" (Matthew 11:28), and Colossians 3:23 calls us to work heartily as for the Lord and not for people. When God is at the center of our hearts and minds, even ordinary work at school or the office takes on eternal weight. A sister then testified how, praying in the Holy Spirit from Florida, she saw God move in her son's heart in Ohio to read the Word - the Bible being her daily "bread and drink." The second message, from Matthew 25, warns against today's self-centered culture and calls believers to follow Jesus by serving others. Like Job, who cared for the poor, and like a couple who founded a charity for orphans, we are to do the good deeds God prepared for us - one small act at a time - so that people glorify our Father in heaven.

Trusting the Shepherd, Receiving His Word

Trusting the Shepherd, Receiving His Word

The service opened in John 14, where Jesus promises that whoever loves Him and keeps His word will be loved by the Father, and that the Father and Son will come and make their home in that heart. The first message then walked verse by verse through Psalm 23. Reading it through the eyes of a sheep, the preacher described the dry, scorched hills of Judea where grass is scarce, so the flock depends completely on the shepherd to find food, water, and the safe winding path down the mountain. The rod and staff are not tools of punishment but of rescue and care; when a sheep sees them it grows calm, knowing its protector has come. Even through the valley of the shadow of death God leads His people past danger to a spread table, anoints their heads with the oil of gladness (a picture of the Holy Spirit), and fills the cup until it overflows with more blessing than we can contain. The second message came as a sober warning: a person can sit through an entire service, hear the Word, and still go home empty. Quoting Hebrews, the preacher reminded the church that the word heard profits nothing unless it is mixed with faith. Everything we hold - health, time, money, gifts - is entrusted to us as stewards, and the accuser watches how we use it. Like the barren fig tree given one more year, we are called to bear fruit now: visit the sick, carry one another's burdens, serve the least, and obey while the opportunity lasts, because some moments to do good never come again.

Humble Yourself and Become Christ's Fragrance

Humble Yourself and Become Christ's Fragrance

The service opened with thanksgiving and worship, prayers over the children from Psalm 8, and a reading of Psalm 67. Pastor Nikolay then preached from 1 Peter 5:6-7, "Humble yourselves under the mighty hand of God," weaving in the story of Israel's seventy-year captivity in Babylon. While the false prophet Hananiah promised an easy two years, God had decreed seventy, reminding us that deliverance comes in God's time, not ours. The pastor taught that God controls everything, both the good and the hard, and uses our trials to remove the pride and self we were born with. Sharing how he once discovered he could not truly forgive, he urged the church to stop pitying themselves, lift their eyes to heaven, and praise God in the storm, following Christ who suffered without retaliating and entrusted Himself to the righteous Judge (1 Peter 2:21-23). A closing message and a mother's testimony of her daughter's healing carried the theme further. Like the broken alabaster jar that filled Simon the leper's house with fragrance (Mark 14:3; John 12:3), believers once cast aside like lepers are now the aroma of Christ (2 Corinthians 2:14). Carrying this treasure in earthen vessels (2 Corinthians 4:7), we are called to proclaim His victory everywhere, even through suffering.

Is the Lord Among Us?

Is the Lord Among Us?

Preached during a week of fasting and prayer for the church, this Wednesday message opens with the reminder that God now dwells among His people in the church, the pillar and ground of the truth. The preacher shares his own first experience of fasting, when he begged God for healing, grew impatient, and finally learned that he had nothing to prove to God; the Lord healed him in His own way and time. Fasting, he explains, exists to deepen our prayer and to pull us out of our comfortable routine so the spiritual person can grow. The heart of the message is Israel at Rephidim (Exodus 17), where thirsty people quarreled with Moses and asked, 'Is the Lord among us or not?' Though they had just seen the sea parted, manna, and quail, hardship turned them into complainers, like a spoiled child stamping his feet. The preacher confesses he met the same temptation in a half-built church with only a handful of workers, and again during the COVID years; yet those who kept trusting and laboring saw God build His house. He then points to the struck rock as a picture of Christ, the source of living water, broken for us so that rivers of living water might flow. Finally, in the battle with Amalek, Israel prevailed only while Moses' hands were lifted in prayer. The lesson: when we stop crying out to God, the stream of His grace dries up, so we must come boldly to the throne of grace, where faith, prayer, and obedience turn the impossible into the possible.

Deep Waters: Guarding the Thoughts of the Heart

Deep Waters: Guarding the Thoughts of the Heart

The message opens in Luke 8:22-25, where Jesus and his disciples cross the lake, a storm fills their boat with water, and they find themselves in real danger until Jesus stills the waves and asks, "Where is your faith?" The preacher lingers on one detail: when a boat takes on water, a person has to bail it out or sink. He ties this to Scripture's picture of the thoughts and intentions of the heart as deep waters that a wise person learns to draw out. From there he traces the inner path of every action. We hold facts that we know, we reason over them, and we finally settle on a decision, a direction for our life. Satan can slip a thought into us at the reasoning stage, as he did with Ananias and Sapphira, but the choice itself, and full responsibility for it, stays with us. The people before the flood and in the days of Noah knew about God, yet they did not reckon with him; he was kept outside the brackets of their lives, and the waters swept them away. The call is to set the mind on things above, to gird ourselves with the truth, and to mix what we know with living faith. It is not enough to know the truth as dead religion; it must become our direction and our daily choice. Bail out the wrong thoughts before they fill and sink the boat of your life.

Faithful in Little, Serving for His Glory

Faithful in Little, Serving for His Glory

This midweek service gathered several brothers around one thread: God's word is a lamp for our feet in the spiritual darkness of the last days (Psalm 119:105). While the world stumbles without understanding, those who hold to Scripture can see clearly what is happening and keep their way pure. The first message called believers to be faithful in the small things (Luke 16:10). Do not wait for a great calling - start where you already are. We are responsible for our own hearts and thoughts, for the brothers and sisters around us whose burdens we are to carry, and ultimately before God for every gift he entrusts to us. He delights to take something small and make it great, and faithfulness in little is the first step of growth in his eyes. The central message warned against the hidden hunger to be noticed and praised. Like the Pharisees who prayed to be seen and the disciples who argued over who was greatest, we crave recognition. Yet Jesus calls us to serve as unworthy servants who simply do what they ought, working in his vineyard for his glory and not our own. God sees our motives and rewards each according to his deeds; even the crowns he gives we will one day cast back before his throne. The service closed with a plea to walk in truth (3 John 1:4) and follow Christ alone, standing firm against the deceptions of the last days.

Do You Quarrel With God?

Do You Quarrel With God?

On this Christmas Sunday the pastor rejoices that God did not spare His own Son but sent Him to save us; the torn temple veil now opens the way for every believer to draw near to God. He has just returned from Ukraine, where the war still rages - billboards reading "some wait for the holiday, others wait for a son or father to come home from the front," funeral homes running around the clock, and an air-raid siren that caught him on the road to Lviv. He urges the church to keep praying for Ukraine and to treasure the peace they enjoy in America. His message is built on two parallel stories - Israel grumbling for water at Rephidim (Exodus 17) and, forty years later, their children doing the very same thing at Meribah (Numbers 20). Both generations quarreled with God instead of trusting Him, and the children even exaggerated and lied about their hardships. Moses, worn down by their complaints, struck the rock twice in disobedience and failed to honor God's holiness, and so he himself never entered the Promised Land. The pastor adds a personal story of finding euros at the Warsaw airport and the pull to keep them, before he returned the money to its owner - a living reminder that "all unrighteousness is sin." He names the small everyday lies we have grown used to and, as the year closes, calls the church to examine their words and conduct, to repent, and to ask God to set a guard over their lips in the new year.

Obedience and Why Christ Was Born

Obedience and Why Christ Was Born

As Christmas draws near, the first message turns to Matthew 2 - the wise men, King Herod, and the flight to Egypt - to show that obedience is the key that unlocks God's promises. Joseph heard God and set out by night, and the family was kept safe; Elijah obeyed and was fed by ravens at the brook; Joseph in Egypt was sold by his brothers, yet God turned it into the rescue of many. God protects and provides, but he still asks us to take the step of obedient action. A second message asks why Christ came at all and answers from Matthew 1:21 - to save his people from their sins. Drawing on David's repentance in Psalm 51, the preacher separates two things sin brings: the punishment, which Christ takes away, and the consequences, which often remain in our lives. Forgiveness lifts the verdict but does not erase the wreckage; like David, Jacob, or the men in the furnace, we still walk through circumstances we created ourselves, learning to trust God in them. Between the messages a sister testified that a tumor doctors had already confirmed was simply gone on the day of her biopsy, and that God provided long-term help for a homeless man she serves - living proof that God answers a surrendered heart.

Living a Life That Pleases God

Living a Life That Pleases God

The preacher opens from 1 Thessalonians 4:1, where Paul urges believers to walk in a way that pleases God and to grow in this more and more. He distinguishes two kinds of love: a love that only seeks to satisfy ourselves, and a true, selfless love that delights in pleasing another. Through warm family memories - children growing onions on a windowsill in winter to surprise their mother, and his own son eagerly preparing his breakfast - he shows that genuine love does not think of itself but longs to bring joy to the one it loves. In the same way, we please God not out of duty or law, but because He first loved us. He then leads the church through the hidden, personal areas where God asks us to please Him. At work (Ephesians 6:5-8) we are to labor as for the Lord and not for men, doing our task faithfully even when no boss or camera is watching, for God's eye sees more than any camera. In our thoughts (Philippians 4:8) we are called to dwell on what is true, pure, and honorable, guarding what we feed our minds through media, since whatever we take in slowly shapes who we become. In our speech (Ephesians 4:29) no rotten word should leave our lips; we are to speak only what builds others up, because a careless word can wound a person for years. He closes by reminding the church that those whom God has truly changed are a chosen people, a new creation, set apart from the world. We should no longer carry the old language and habits of our former life. These private areas are precisely where no one sees us, yet God always does.

An Uncompromising Faith in Babylon

An Uncompromising Faith in Babylon

The preacher opens by remembering his grandfather, who spent six years in prison for the Gospel under Soviet rule, when the lines were black and white: to believe meant to be persecuted. Today, in the freedom of the West, the danger is subtler. Freedom brings endless options, and options open the door to compromise, which always means gaining one thing while quietly surrendering another, often conscience, purity, family, or Scripture. Turning to Daniel chapter 1, he describes four Jewish teenagers carried off to Babylon around 605 BC, roughly a thousand kilometers from home. Babylon tries to reshape them in three ways: by filling their minds with new information (what they believe), by changing how they live through the king's rich food and wine, and by erasing their identity with new pagan names. Babylon pictures the whole system of the world, which still dazzles us with its splendor while demanding we give up what matters most. Daniel resolves in his heart not to defile himself. He openly states his convictions, sets a standard even higher than the law requires, and proposes a ten-day test, trusting God with the outcome. God grants him favor, protection, and finally wisdom ten times greater than Babylon's experts, a reward for faithfulness that later saves many lives. Greatness, the preacher concludes, comes not through grand feats but through quiet faithfulness to God's word in the smallest things, wherever you are.

Living Sacrifice and the Path of Humility

Living Sacrifice and the Path of Humility

The service opened with worship and a call to holiness, then the first message, drawn from Romans 12:1 and 1 Corinthians 6:19-20, reminded the church that our bodies are temples of the Holy Spirit, bought with the price of Christ's blood. Body and soul cannot be separated, so God asks us to present both, while we are still alive, as a sacrifice that is living, holy, and pleasing to him. Using the picture of a pen passed from one preacher to the next, the preacher showed that we are only instruments and that all glory belongs to the Master who uses us. The main message, from Matthew 23:11-12, unfolded a universal spiritual law: whoever exalts himself will be humbled, and whoever humbles himself will be exalted. Like gravity, this law works whether or not we believe in it. Pride begins in the heart, as it did with Lucifer in Isaiah 14, and always ends in a fall. Christ in Philippians 2 walked the opposite road: though equal with God he emptied himself, became a servant, and obeyed even to death on the cross, so God exalted him and gave him the name above every name. The same law shaped Moses in the wilderness and Mary, the lowly servant through whom many nations are blessed. God searches not for the great or the clever but for the broken and humble who tremble at his word. So we are urged to clothe ourselves in humility, to lift one another up, and to let God raise us in his own time.

Guard Your Heart, Serve with Diligence

Guard Your Heart, Serve with Diligence

The service opened in worship around the truth that God dwells among the praises of His people (Psalm 22). The first message, drawn from 2 Corinthians 10 and Proverbs 4, called believers to guard the heart and to win the hidden battlefield of the mind. Using David and Goliath and the failures of King Saul, the preacher showed that we can speak fine words outwardly while harboring envy, resentment, and sinful plans within. Unguarded thoughts cost Saul his head and nearly ruined David himself; yet, like David's stones, the gospel is given to bring down every proud thought that exalts itself against the knowledge of God. A second message from a visiting preacher took up the theme of diligence and dedication. From 1 Timothy 4 and Ephesians 4 he taught that spiritual growth and the success of every ministry depend on sincere, wholehearted service offered cheerfully to God. Through his own testimony of nearly trading his anointing for a higher wage, and the examples of Elisha, Rebekah at the well, and the covenant loyalty of Ruth, he urged the church that diligence leads to dedication, and dedication opens new doors of blessing and destiny. The service closed with cheerful giving (2 Corinthians 9:7), prayer for the grieving, the sick, the lost, and for nations in crisis, and a blessing spoken over the whole church.

Obey God Rather Than Men

Obey God Rather Than Men

The evening opens at Psalm 51, where David asks the Lord to open his lips so he can offer praise. God does not delight in outward sacrifice but in a broken and contrite heart, the kind of prayer the tax collector brought in Luke 18 when he beat his chest and asked for mercy. We gather not to impress one another but to sharpen one another, like iron sharpening iron, and to come before God humbly. The main message walks through Acts chapter 5. The apostles are jailed for preaching, freed by an angel, and told to go right back and keep proclaiming the word. Against all human logic they return to the same place that got them arrested, declaring before the council that we must obey God rather than men. Gamaliel warns that schemes built on men collapse, but a work of God cannot be stopped. Like Joseph, who honored God through slavery and prison and was lifted to second in the kingdom, those who put God first bear fruit that lasts. The preacher asks whose voice we really follow: God's, or the noise of news, fear, leaders, and friends. A second word turns to love. Jesus told the rich young ruler to love his neighbor as himself, and then gave a new commandment to love one another as He has loved us, so that everyone would know we are His disciples. Salvation is grace, a gift we cannot earn by works, shown in how Christ looked on Peter and restored him after his denial. We are called to love one another without conditions, no matter how others have treated us.

The Harvest Is Plentiful: Sent by God's Will

The Harvest Is Plentiful: Sent by God's Will

This missionary Sunday service was built around the words of Jesus in Luke 10 and Matthew 9: the harvest is great, but the workers are few. The preacher reminded the church that Christ chose seventy disciples and sent them out two by two, not wherever they pleased, but to the places He Himself intended to go. The least we can do is pray for the Lord to send laborers; the most is to become those laborers ourselves. Through the stories of Saul on the road to Damascus and Jonah fleeing Nineveh, the message showed how God often sends us toward the very people our own hearts resist. Paul longed to reach his own nation first, yet the Lord made him an apostle to the Gentiles - the rejected, the broken, those once called not a people. True servants learn to pray, not my will but Yours be done, neither running ahead of God nor lagging behind Him. The service overflowed with testimonies of God already at work: street evangelism in New Jersey where hundreds came to Christ and the sick were healed, a mission school training young Ukrainians, and missionaries serving in the Dominican Republic, Thailand, and across Europe. The invitation was clear: God still calls ordinary people, fills them with the Holy Spirit, and asks only that we be willing to go.

The War Within: Know Your True Enemy

The War Within: Know Your True Enemy

The Christian life is a battle, and Scripture says sinful desires wage war inside us. There is no neutral position: only what drifts goes with the current, while everything else must be fought for. We face two very different kinds of enemies - some God commands us to hate and put to death, and others He commands us to love. The great danger is friendly fire, confusing the two. The sins living in our flesh - lust, greed, anger, slander, gossip and lies - are the real enemies that destroy us and can shut us out of the Kingdom. People, even those who wrong us, are the enemies Christ tells us to love. If we love the sin we were meant to kill, we will end up hating the brother we were meant to love. We fight not with worldly weapons but with God's power, taking every thought captive to Christ. Switch off the gossip and noise that feed anger, pray, fast, and fall more deeply in love with Jesus. As Christ said, Get behind me, Satan, we too must learn to refuse the flesh and walk in the fear of God.

Examine Yourself and Keep Your Word

Examine Yourself and Keep Your Word

The evening service opened with a call to tune our hearts to heaven and truly listen, since Jesus said to take heed how we hear. The first message, drawing on John Wesley and the Oxford Holy Club, walked through the 22 questions those early believers used daily to examine themselves - covering honesty, priorities, spiritual discipline, sharing the faith, stewardship of money, overcoming sin, relationships, complaining, and whether Christ is truly real to us. It is natural to hear a good word and immediately think of who else needs it, but the preacher urged each listener to ask instead, what is God saying to me? Scripture calls us to examine ourselves and to hide God's word in our hearts so that we will not sin. The second message took up one of those questions - do you keep your word? Through Joshua's oath to the Gibeonites, when the sun stood still, and the famine that came generations later because Saul broke that covenant, the preacher showed how seriously God honors a promise. Finally, from Gethsemane, he warned that Peter could not watch even one hour, calling us to watch and pray so we do not fall into temptation, and to stay faithful to the vows we made to God and our families.

Believe God's Word and Speak Life

Believe God's Word and Speak Life

The service opened with a call to stand watch and listen for the voice of God (Habakkuk 2:1). It was underscored by a sobering poem about a young man whom the Spirit prompted to tell a dying woman about Christ, yet he kept putting it off until later - and the chance was gone forever. Sometimes obedience must happen now, or never. The main message came from Ezekiel 37, the valley of dry bones - a picture of the spiritually dead people and the dry, hopeless situations we walk among every day. God did not tell the prophet merely to pray over the bones; He told him to prophesy, to speak God's word directly into the lifeless scene. We are quick to believe a doctor's diagnosis or a boss's verdict, but slow to trust and act on the word of the Lord, our great Physician. Using Moses striking the rock instead of speaking to it (Numbers 20) and Jesus calling Lazarus out of the tomb by name (John 11), the preacher urged believers to obey God's word exactly and to declare it specifically, never adding to it or trying to improve on it. When we receive a word from the Lord, we must hold it, obey it, and proclaim it in faith - especially over our unsaved loved ones, trusting that God still raises dry bones to life.

Good Soil and the Appointed Hour

Good Soil and the Appointed Hour

The service opened with a steadying word: the trouble we dread may never come, or may arrive far gentler than we fear, and if it does strike in full force, the Lord gives strength to bear it, for He never lays on us more than we can carry. The first message then opened Matthew 13 and its parables of the Kingdom - the sower, the wheat and tares, the mustard seed, and the leaven. The preacher pressed one truth home: God's word is living seed that always bears fruit when it lands on good soil, so the real question is the condition of our own heart. A buzzing phone, business worries, and restless thoughts harden us into the trodden path from which the enemy snatches the word away. We should not settle for a thirty-fold harvest but gird ourselves and ask God for a hundredfold, remembering that we too are sowers and must seek His wisdom to correct others gently, without uprooting the wheat. A guest reminded the church from Matthew 7 that not everyone who says 'Lord, Lord' will enter, only those who do the Father's will. A visiting brother from a church in Kentucky then preached from Jeremiah 46:17 on Pharaoh who missed his appointed time, and on Jesus weeping over a Jerusalem that failed to know its hour of visitation. With testimony of healing and prophetic warnings of coming upheaval and war, he urged believers to keep oil in their lamps, watch over their children, and be ready for the Lord's soon return.

You Are Not Your Own

You Are Not Your Own

The evening opened in Romans 6 with a reminder that we were buried with Christ in baptism so that we might walk in newness of life. The first message centered on desire. Drawing on Daniel, called a man of desires and greatly beloved, the preacher showed how Daniel set his heart, sought understanding, and humbled himself before God, and how through his intercession God's purposes were accomplished. Our desires are not random; they flow from our thoughts, and they can be godly or fleshly. James warns that each person is tempted by his own craving, which conceives sin, and sin gives birth to death. Cain's jealousy, Esau trading his birthright for a meal, and a sobering encounter with a man bound by torment after sin all showed where unchecked appetite leads, while Jesus alone heals and sets free. We can restrain our desires, for all things are lawful, but nothing should master us. The second message turned to the words, render to Caesar what is Caesar's and to God what is God's. The coin bears Caesar's image, so it belongs to him; we bear God's image, so we belong to God. Our bodies are the temple of the Holy Spirit; we are not our own, but bought with the blood of Christ. As a chosen people and a royal priesthood, we are strangers and pilgrims here, citizens of heaven called to live differently so that others, seeing our conduct, will glorify God.

Gain Through Loss: Taking Up Christ's Yoke

Gain Through Loss: Taking Up Christ's Yoke

Opening with Matthew 11:28-30, the preacher observes that people everywhere are exhausted and anxious, chasing an elusive "American dream" that never satisfies. Jesus calls all the weary and burdened to come to Him for rest - not so He does our work for us, but so He lifts the crushing weight of our own worries and gives us His light yoke in exchange. The theme is "gain through loss." Christ Himself lived to do the Father's will rather than His own, and He invites us to do the same: to stop being slaves of our own desires (1 Corinthians 6:19-20; Galatians 2:20) and let Christ live in us. We are not our own, having been bought at the price of His blood, so the hardest battle is the one against our own self-will, and it is won only by the help of the Holy Spirit. Bearing the cross God assigns makes us salt and light in a perishing world (Matthew 5; Matthew 10); living only for ourselves leaves us no different from unbelievers. Faithful cross-bearing leads to a glorious crown (Revelation 3:11), for there is no crown without a cross and no gain without loss. The preacher closes by urging each listener to examine their heart, repent while there is still time, and willingly take up Christ's yoke.

Examine Yourself and Stand Firm in Faith

Examine Yourself and Stand Firm in Faith

This midweek service gathered the church around one call - to measure our lives by God's Word and be transformed into the image of our heavenly Father. The first message reminded us that Christ came in the fullness of time and offered Himself once for our sins, and that we now live in the season of waiting for His return for salvation. The question is deeply personal: am I really waiting for Him? Like Paul urged Timothy, we are to give ourselves to Scripture, teaching, and prayer rather than crowd our days with things that pull the heart away. Drawing on 2 Corinthians 13:5, the congregation was urged to examine itself and ask whether we are truly in the faith. Israel was tested at the bitter waters of Marah, and David prayed, "Search me, O God, and lead me in the way everlasting." A believer should not live unsure of eternal life - eternal life is to know God and walk with Him now, keeping the first love that the church in Ephesus had let slip, and never grieving the Holy Spirit with anger or bitterness. The second message lifted up Christ from Colossians 1 as the image of the invisible God, by whom all things were created and in whom all things hold together. Faith is the substance of things hoped for, and by faith we understand that the visible came from God's spoken word, which nothing can stop. Yet God works through surrendered people, so He calls us to present our bodies a living sacrifice, refusing to be conformed to the world and being transformed by the renewing of our minds. Because all things are from Him, through Him, and to Him, our part is humble faith and obedience.

Are We Honoring God With Our Best?

Are We Honoring God With Our Best?

Guest preacher Brother Thomas opened the book of Malachi, where God confronts His people with a piercing question: a son honors his father and a servant his master, so where is the honor due to God? Israel kept bringing blind and lame animals to the altar - the leftovers they no longer wanted - while saving their best for themselves. The preacher asked whether we treat God the way we treat the people we respect every day, or whether we hand Him only the scraps of our time, money, and devotion. Drawing on the kingdom of God, he reminded us that no one can serve two masters and that following Christ means putting our hand to the plow without looking back. Like David, who refused to offer a sacrifice that cost him nothing, we are called to give the Lord what is truly costly. He warned against a casual age that calls evil normal, noting that where the fear of God fades, His Word soon disappears from our lips and our lives. Finally, from Malachi 3, he addressed robbing God in tithes and offerings, explaining that our time, our resources, and our very lives already belong to Him. God keeps a book of remembrance for those who fear Him and records even the smallest act of faithfulness, and one day He will welcome His faithful servants home.

Built Up in Faith, Doers of the Word

Built Up in Faith, Doers of the Word

The Wednesday service opened by inviting weary, anxious hearts to lay down their burdens and find rest at the feet of Jesus. Two messages followed, both anchored in God's Word. The first, from the letter of Jude, urged believers to build themselves up in their most holy faith, to pray in the Holy Spirit, to keep themselves in God's love, and to wait for the mercy of Christ. We live in the in-between time, from our first salvation to our final salvation - a season of waiting and spiritual struggle in which we must contend for the faith once delivered to the saints. The preacher warned about people who quietly slip into the church - hidden stains at the love feasts, clouds without water, fruitless autumn trees - and against drifting after whatever popular online preacher catches the ear. Using the picture of searching for solid building blocks in Haiti, he called the church to become strong, worthy stones in God's house, to remember the words of the apostles of the Lord Jesus, and to endure to the very end. The second message, from the letter of James, called the church to receive the implanted Word with meekness and to be doers of it, not hearers only. Like newborns longing for pure milk, we grow toward salvation only through Scripture. The Word is a mirror that shows us what to change, yet many merely judge others while ignoring their own lives. God's kindness leads us to repentance, and as we gaze into His Word we are transformed from glory to glory.

The Father's Role in the Family

The Father's Role in the Family

On Father's Day the church gathers to thank God and to honor fathers. The message centers on the father's role in the home and opens with Deuteronomy 6, where God commands His people to keep His word in their hearts and to teach it diligently to their children - at home and on the road, when lying down and rising up. The preacher stresses that a father cannot be replaced. He points to how children who grow up without an engaged father suffer, and warns that the enemy deliberately attacks what holds a family together. Every man is called to be a priest in his own home, responsible not only for daily bread but for the spiritual life of his children. Drawing on Malachi, Mark, Ephesians and Proverbs, the sermon calls children to honor their father and mother - the first commandment with a promise of a good and long life - and calls fathers to be both physical and spiritual fathers who raise wise children walking in truth. There is no greater joy for a father than to see his children living for God.

True Riches: Trusting God, Not Money

True Riches: Trusting God, Not Money

This Sunday service marked a special day for the church - the Sunday school graduation of its teenagers. It opened with worship and a prayer over the children, rooted in 1 Peter 1:22 and the call to set a young person on the right path early, with a reminder that faith and obedience pass to the next generation chiefly through the example of parents. The main message explored the difference between simply having money and being truly prosperous in God's eyes. Drawing on the rich ruler in Luke 18, the warning of Deuteronomy 8, and Paul's counsel in 1 Timothy 6, the preacher cautioned that the love of money quietly pulls people away from faith, while everything we own - our home, our work, our income - comes from God's hand. By the measure of Scripture, anyone with food, clothing, and shelter is already rich. He shared a childhood story of being tested with a few coins to learn generosity, then closed with a striking thought: money can buy a house but not a home, a bed but not rest, medicine but not health. Real security and lasting joy come from trusting God as the true Provider and giving freely to others.

How to Walk in Victory Over Sin

How to Walk in Victory Over Sin

After sharing communion, the preacher turns to Romans 6, especially verses 8 and 9, to answer a practical question: now that we have remembered Christ's death, how do we keep moving forward and live in daily victory with him? The whole chapter, he notes, keeps repeating one word - know. To live victoriously we must first know what Christ has already done. He died once for sin and will never die again, and death no longer has any power over him. To be dead to sin means two things. Christ took the death we deserved as the penalty for sin, standing in our place and giving us life, and through his death he cut off sin's power so it can no longer reign over us. Sin is still sin, but our relationship to it has completely changed. Yet knowing is not enough. Like freed slaves who kept serving their old masters because they never claimed their liberty, many believers have freedom in Christ but never accept it as their own. Finally we must act. We are to guard the doors of our lives and refuse to let sin in through our eyes, our ears, or the places we go, never handing our bodies over as instruments of unrighteousness. The preacher points to Cain, who was told to master the sin crouching at his door, and to Joseph, who knew the living God, rejected what was normal in Egypt, and ran from temptation. Know, reckon, and do - this is how we walk in victory every single day.

The Fear of the Lord, Treasure of the Church

The Fear of the Lord, Treasure of the Church

On this Sunday in the Pentecost season, the message opens with Malachi 4:1-2. A burning day of judgment awaits the proud and wicked, but those who fear God's name will go out leaping for joy like calves released to spring pasture. The preacher even shows a video of cattle let out after a long winter to picture that release into joy. The heart of the message is the fear of the Lord. At Pentecost (Acts 2:43) reverent fear came upon every soul, and in that atmosphere the first church saw many wonders. The fear of God is the indicator of His presence; it both restrains us from sin and moves us to obey His word. The preacher traces it through Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, and Joseph, and warns from Jeremiah 2:19 that forsaking God and losing His fear throws the door of sin wide open. Believers did not receive a spirit of slavery and worldly dread (Romans 8:15) but revere the Lord rather than fearing what the world fears. The fear of God is a treasure (Isaiah 33:6) that the enemy works to steal. Using Ezra's grief and repentance, the preacher calls the church to examine their lives, put away hidden sin, and let holy reverence fill their hearts so they walk in holiness and see God's power again.

Three Signs You Are in God's Will

Three Signs You Are in God's Will

This Wednesday service opens at the narrow gate of Matthew 7 and turns on one practical question: how can a believer actually know he is walking in God's will? The visiting preacher answers with three biblical signs. The first sign is a life that matches the Bible. We are to hold our character up to Scripture like a mirror and refuse to be molded by the world, remembering that the very things we count as blessings can become the distractions the enemy uses against us. The second sign is peace in the heart. God's Word may not tell us whom to marry or which job to take, but the Holy Spirit gives an inner rest that confirms our decisions, while running from God, as Jonah did, brings only storms. The third and hardest sign is faith. If our walk and our ministry never stretch us past our comfort, we are probably not where God wants us; He sent Peter onto the water and led Jesus through Gethsemane to show that His will asks us to step out and trust. The evening closes with visiting Ukrainian pastors who share their wartime testimony - evacuating families, planting churches, and building shelter for the displaced. They urge the church to guard a secret place of prayer, where the Father who sees in secret answers openly, and to keep interceding for peace in Ukraine.

Could Not God Do the Same for Me?

Could Not God Do the Same for Me?

The evening opens with Psalm 103:13 - as a father pities his children, so the Lord pities those who fear Him - and turns to a question that quietly haunts many believers: if God blessed, healed, or rescued someone else, could He not do the same for me? Walking through Joseph interpreting the two prisoners' dreams in Genesis 40 and the crowd at Lazarus' tomb in John 11, the preacher shows how naturally we generalize God, assuming that because He acted one way for one person He owes the same to everyone. Hebrews 11 shatters that assumption. The same chapter celebrates those who by faith conquered kingdoms and received their dead raised, and then lists those who were tortured, stoned, sawn in two, and killed by the sword. Same God, same faith, the same will, yet wildly different outcomes. Romans 9 and the image of the Potter and the clay answer the cry for fairness: God shows mercy to whom He wills, and the clay has no right to argue with the Potter. The call is to stop measuring our lives by other people's blessings and to accept God's individual purpose for us. God can, but He is not obligated. Like Peter, who asked about John, we hear, "What is that to you? Follow Me." The safest and happiest place is the center of God's will, even when it is painful or hard to understand, saying, "I agree with You."

Do Everything as Unto Christ

Do Everything as Unto Christ

The preacher calls believers to do everything - at home, at work, in ministry - as if it were done for Christ Himself and not merely for people. When we serve with our eyes only on a person's face, the work can turn careless; but when we serve as unto Christ, we give our whole soul and our very best. Feed your husband, take your wife out, sweep the floor, and preach all as though the Lord Himself were receiving it. He then turns to mission and preparation. Just as the missionary team spent about six months getting ready for Guatemala, and an astronaut is trained long before launch, no one is sent unprepared. We are created in Christ for good works (Ephesians 2:10), yet we must grow - reading and meditating on Scripture (1 Timothy 4:13), maturing past spiritual milk like a child who grows up to help the family - so that we can fulfill the mission God entrusts to us. Finally he warns against doing great works in our own will rather than God's. Like Saul on the road to Damascus, our prayer should be, 'Lord, what do You want me to do?' The message closes with a call to evangelism and prayer: inviting people home and to church, an upcoming outreach service, buying Bibles to give away, and prayer for a missionary school and various needs.