Slavic Full Gospel Church logo SFGC

Repentance

34 sermons on this topic

Lord, Is It I? Guarding the Heart at Communion

Lord, Is It I? Guarding the Heart at Communion

On this communion Sunday the church gathers to remember the suffering and death of Jesus at Golgotha, giving thanks that we were redeemed not with gold or silver but with the precious blood of the Savior. Reading Matthew 26, the preacher walks through the Passover Jesus kept - the unleavened bread, the bitter herbs dipped in salt water that pictured the tears of slavery, and the lamb - showing how every detail pointed forward to the Lamb of God. The heart of the message is the contrast between the eleven disciples, who grieved and each asked "Lord, is it I?", and Judas, who called Jesus only "Rabbi". The disciples confessed Him as Lord, like Peter's "You are the Christ, the Son of the living God"; for Judas He had become merely one teacher among many. His faith leaked away like water from a cracked vessel, because the unrepented sin of stealing slowly drained the grace from his life until he sold the Lord for thirty pieces of silver. We are urged to examine ourselves for even a small crack of sin, to repent so God can refill us with grace, and then to receive the bread and the cup worthily. The service closes by proclaiming that Christ paid the full price of divine justice as our substitute, and that this salvation belongs to everyone who personally receives Him.

Vessels of Honor, Cleansed for the Master's Use

Vessels of Honor, Cleansed for the Master's Use

In this communion service the pastor reminds the church of the words they have just sung: it was not the nails or the cross that held Jesus to Calvary, it was our sin. From 2 Timothy 2 he teaches that a great house holds vessels of honor and vessels of dishonor, and the Master longs to use those who keep themselves clean and ready, like the fine china a family once reserved only for special guests. Drawing on 1 Thessalonians 4, 1 Corinthians 6, Colossians 3 and Isaiah 1, he gives two reasons to pursue holiness: God wants to use us for His glory, and we no longer belong to this world. We have been washed, sanctified and justified, and our bodies are now temples of the Holy Spirit. Like Job, who made a covenant with his eyes, we are to put sin to death decisively and remove it entirely, so that nothing is left for us to choose. At the table the church remembers Christ's broken body and shed blood, the priceless price of our redemption, and is reminded to come only at peace with God and one another. The service closes with thanksgiving from 2 Peter 1, that His divine power has already given us everything we need for life and godliness, so we can rejoice even now, before we ever see the answer.

Seeing as God Sees: The Lord's Table

Seeing as God Sees: The Lord's Table

The service opens with prayer drawn from Psalm 86:11, asking the Lord to teach His way, and a reminder that God speaks to those who deliberately set aside time to listen. A worship song and a narrative poem about the thief crucified beside Jesus turn the church toward the coming remembrance of Christ's death at communion. The preacher pauses to speak of the gift of the church - that believers belong to one another and are never truly alone - and asks the congregation to pray for his son serving at the front. Reading Isaiah 53, he shows that the crowd assumed the suffering Servant was punished for His own sin, when in fact He was wounded for ours. God sees differently than people do, and He has not hidden that truth - He has opened it in His Word. The central teaching turns to 1 Corinthians 11. The Lord's Supper is not an ordinary meal but a holy act that proclaims Christ's death until He comes. Paul warns that careless, unworthy participation carries real consequences, and calls every believer first to examine and judge himself in repentance, so that he need not be judged by God.

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.

Take My Yoke and Stay Close to God

Take My Yoke and Stay Close to God

The evening opens with a call to holiness. The preacher reflects on how quickly time passes and that one day each of us will stand before God, who has said that without holiness no one will see Him. He points to the Shunammite woman who recognized Elisha as a holy man of God, set apart from the world, and to Peter's command, "Be holy, for I am holy." Giving thanks, he reminds the church that everything we have is God's grace, freely available to anyone. From Matthew 11, Jesus invites the weary to take His yoke and learn from Him. A yoke joins two who walk side by side: Christ never leaves us to labor alone but stays beside us to the end of the age, which is why His burden is light. The danger is that we quickly stop valuing this nearness and let our first love grow cold. Warning from Deuteronomy that comfort and prosperity make us forget God, he urges honest self-examination and real repentance rather than a powerless form of godliness. Sister Vira, a missionary serving in war-torn Ukraine, then shares from Mark 11:24: God taught her to stop dictating her own prayers and instead pray with simple, trusting faith. The service closes with heartfelt intercession for Ukraine and for one another.

Forgiveness and the Father's Discipline

Forgiveness and the Father's Discipline

The service opens from Hebrews 2, urging us to pay the closest attention to the great salvation first spoken by the Lord, so that we never drift away from it. The preacher then brings to a close a study on forgiveness drawn from Matthew 18:21-35, Jesus' parable of the unforgiving servant, which He told in answer to Peter's question about how often we must forgive. Before applying the parable, the preacher teaches how to read it. A parable is an analogy, not a math equation: it has one point of contact that the author himself draws, while the surrounding details need not all be decoded. He illustrates from Jeremiah 13:23 - the Ethiopian's skin and the leopard's spots - to show that no one can change his own nature by willpower, which is why a sinner needs not repair but a new birth and a new heart. Applying this, he shows that forgiveness stands at the heart of the story: Jesus tells Peter to forgive not seven times but seventy times seven. The parable speaks of life here and now, not of eternity; when we refuse to forgive, God disciplines us on earth to lead us back. Yet this is no license to hold a grudge or to presume on grace, for it is a fearful thing to fall into the hands of the living God. The pastor closes by reminding us that God's chastening, like a loving father's, is for our good, shaping us into the image of Christ.

Eyes Opened at the Lord's Table

Eyes Opened at the Lord's Table

This communion service centers on what the preacher calls the most sacred moment in the life of the church: remembering the death of Jesus Christ. From 1 Corinthians 11 he reminds the congregation that whenever we eat the bread and drink the cup we proclaim the Lord's death until he comes, and he urges everyone to come to the table consciously, examining their hearts, asking whether they truly forgive as Christ forgave them and treasure the salvation he purchased. Tracing Scripture from Genesis to the Gospels, the message shows how the disobedience of Adam and Eve left them ashamed, and how their fig leaves could not cover their guilt - only shed blood could, pointing forward to the cross. On the road to Emmaus the disciples' eyes were finally opened when Jesus broke the bread, and in the same way God has opened our spiritual eyes to see what the world cannot: that earthly things never satisfy the soul and that Christ is near, coming for his own. Drawing on the early church of Acts 2, on David refusing the water bought with the lives of his mighty men, and on Mephibosheth welcomed to the king's table, the preacher calls communion an undeserved privilege - sharing in Christ's sufferings so that we may also share in his resurrection. He closes with four directions for the table: look back in remembrance, forward in hope, around in unity, and within in honest self-examination.

A Prepared Heart, Ready to Meet Christ

A Prepared Heart, Ready to Meet Christ

Across this Wednesday gathering, several brothers preached one shared message: this is about us. One brother, who recently fled the war in Ukraine and changed homes seven times in just a few years, testified how complete dependence on God carried him through war and exile. His urgent appeal was to pray more in the Spirit, in other tongues, to seek God's counsel before every decision, and to stop obeying our own "I don't want to," because following our feelings can cost us what God has prepared. The main sermon, "A Prepared Man of God," opened from Isaiah 66:1-2: the Lord looks on the one who is humble, contrite in spirit, and who trembles at His word. The preacher confessed that amid the turmoil of the day he had lost his own meekness, and he called the church to choose humility, a broken heart, and reverence for Scripture as the foundation of life. The systems of this world, past and present, are rotten and passing away; our task is not to fix the world by quarreling, but to be changed ourselves and to stand in the gap in prayer. The closing word reminded everyone that sin has corrupted the world since Eden, and there is no peace for the wicked, yet the blood of Christ gives power even to bless our enemies. With the recent killing of a young Christian speaker fresh in mind, and rumors that the church would soon be taken up, the pastor pointed to the parable of the ten virgins: be ready to meet Christ at any moment, whether He comes today or calls us after a long and faithful life.

What Will You Say About Yourself?

What Will You Say About Yourself?

The service opened with a call to thirst for God - to long for His presence the way a deer pants for water and dry, cracked ground cries out for rain (Psalm 63, Psalm 42). The preachers urged the church not to come out of habit, but to truly hunger for God, be filled by Him, and cling to Him so tightly that no power could tear us away. The main message turned to the piercing question John the Baptist once faced: "What will you say about yourself?" Before people we can hide, embellish, and pretend everything is fine, but God already knows the heart. Through the Pharisee and the tax collector, Jacob's deception, and Christ's letters to Sardis and Laodicea, the preacher warned against wearing a mask of spiritual life while being empty inside. Yet this was an invitation, not a verdict. Like the tax collector who simply begged for mercy, we can come to God honestly, worship Him in spirit and truth, and be changed from glory to glory. We have an Advocate in Jesus Christ, so we confess to one another, pray for one another, and let God cleanse and restore us.

God's Word Endures in Every Form

God's Word Endures in Every Form

The service opens with a closing exhortation to be fruitful and to meet one another's needs without weighing how the gift will be spent. It is not ours to judge a need but to answer it, for God sees everything and rewards it, and one day we will give Him an account (Hebrews 4:13). The preacher urges the church to remember where it has slipped and to repent while the time is still favorable, before the Lord removes the lampstand (Revelation 2:5), since no human effort can change a heart from within - only the living Word of God can save a soul (John 12:47-48; James 1:21; John 1:1; Acts 4:12). The main teaching is a study about the Bible itself. We are encouraged first to know about Scripture and then what it says. It was written in Hebrew and Aramaic and in Koine, the common Greek everyone could understand, so the Gospel would reach both the lowly and the great. Through the centuries God's people copied and translated His Word - the Septuagint, the Latin Vulgate, Wycliffe, Tyndale, Luther, and the Russian Synodal Bible of 1876 - so every generation could read it in its own tongue. A survey of writing materials follows: stone, wax, clay, pottery, papyrus, parchment, scrolls, the codex, the printing press, and now phones and tablets. The point is simple - the format has never mattered. What matters is that we actually read, study, and obey the Word, which has come down to us undistorted. The most important surface for God's Word is the human heart, and since faith comes by hearing, even reading it aloud will feed the soul.

The Conditions of True Forgiveness

The Conditions of True Forgiveness

Beginning with John the Baptist's preaching in Matthew 3, the message explores why Christ came to redeem people from their sins, and why that redemption is only possible through genuine repentance rather than empty religious words. Like the Pharisees John rebuked, anyone can mouth an apology, but real forgiveness rests on honestly acknowledging guilt and turning away from it. Repentance, the preacher explained, starts with seeing and confessing your own wrong. Because every sin against another person is also a sin against God, we can only pray "forgive us as we forgive others" if God truly matters to us. Through Jeremiah the Lord asks for almost nothing - only acknowledge your guilt - and He Himself blots it out. The sermon then turned to how we treat one another. When someone wrongs you, Scripture says watch yourself first: do not strike back, and do not quietly let the person perish in their sin while you feel cleaner than they are. Speak the truth in love to win your brother back, forgive whenever he repents, and if he refuses, release him before God and pray for his repentance instead of demanding judgment.

His Mercies Are New Every Morning

His Mercies Are New Every Morning

The service opens in repentance and worship, as the congregation asks God to forgive lukewarm prayers, lingering doubt, and the failure to forgive others, pleading to be led along the narrow path. The pastor welcomes everyone present and watching online, reminding them that they have gathered not because God needs them, but because they need Him, and that His mercy alone has brought each person to this place. Reading from Lamentations 3:22-23, he declares that we are not consumed because the Lord's mercy never runs out - it is renewed every single morning, and great is His faithfulness. Our presence, our forgiveness, and our very survival are gifts of grace, not rewards for being good enough. The gathering then turns to worship, exalting the name of Jesus in whom they have found salvation and peace, and giving thanks for the Holy Spirit who comforts, teaches, and leads believers like a good shepherd toward God's kingdom.

Walk in the Light, Thirst for the Spirit

Walk in the Light, Thirst for the Spirit

The first message, drawn from James 1, taught that God allows trials to test our faith and grow endurance, and that He invites us to ask Him for wisdom without doubting. The preacher compared hidden sin to rats scurrying in a dark room: we can either leave the light off and pretend they are not there, or let God turn on the light and reveal what truly lives in our hearts. Quoting Psalm 139, John 1 and Ephesians 5, he urged believers to welcome that light even when it exposes the ugly, because Christ shines into our darkness not to crush us but to lead us to repentance and cleansing. We cannot defeat these hidden sins on our own; we need God's wisdom and the power of the Holy Spirit to put on the armor of light. A testimony of answered prayer - a son's healing and his rescue from war-torn Ukraine - reminded the church that God hears those who cry out to Him persistently. The second message, preparing the congregation for Pentecost, walked through Acts 2, 10 and 19 to teach that the same Jesus who saves also baptizes in the Holy Spirit. Salvation comes by faith and repentance; the gift of the Spirit is received the same way, by asking and believing, and the church is called to thirst for the Spirit and earnestly desire His gifts for building up the body of Christ.

Hold Fast to the Lord, His Dwelling Place

Hold Fast to the Lord, His Dwelling Place

On this Easter-season Sunday, after celebrating the risen Christ, the first preacher pointed to Jesus' words that foxes have holes and birds have nests, but the Son of Man had no place to lay His head. Yet God does seek a resting place - not a building, but the humble and contrite heart. From Isaiah and the letters to the Corinthians he reminded the church that our bodies are the temple of the living God, and the Holy Spirit longs to dwell within us. The invitation was simple: humble yourself, repent, and open the door so Christ can come in. A young father then shared how God spared his two-year-old son, who stopped breathing after slipping into a pool, and how God had also rescued him from drowning as a child. He could not stay silent about the Lord's reviving mercy. Bishop Larion brought the main message: we all stand before God with open faces, changed from glory to glory, and we are His temple. Drawing on Barnabas at Antioch, Job, Hezekiah and many others, he urged the church again and again to hold fast to the Lord with a sincere heart. Life passes quickly, and what we cling to decides our eternity. Even where we have wandered or grown cold, God is able to restore, heal and renew the one who clings to Him and stays faithful to the end.

Chosen to Be Holy, Sent for the Lost

Chosen to Be Holy, Sent for the Lost

This midweek service fell during a week of fasting and opened with a call to sanctification from Psalm 73. The pastor reminded the church that God is good to the pure in heart and that the Holy Spirit quietly convicts, guides, and comforts us even when no one else can see. Our deepest desire, like Asaph's, should be God Himself: whom have I in heaven but You, and with You I want nothing on earth. A second message urged believers to number their days, echoing Moses' prayer, and to stay faithful to gathering with God's people. Using Ruth and Orpah, the preacher showed how Orpah turned back partway while Ruth pressed on into blessing, and pointed to Genesis 17:1 and Ephesians 1:4: God chose us before the foundation of the world to walk before Him holy and blameless. From Abraham to Anna the prophetess, a long line of faithful saints proves that anyone who truly wants to serve God will be helped by Him. Missionaries Waldemar and Heidi then shared. Heidi told how, though raised in church, she met the living Jesus only after marrying and moving to Mosul, when an American believer told her she needed Christ in her heart; she repented in tears and went on to serve as a missionary in India. Waldemar preached Luke 15 - the lost sheep, the lost coin, and the prodigal son - reminding everyone that Jesus receives sinners and leaves the ninety-nine to seek the one. The service closed with a call to come home, prayer for persecuted believers including an imprisoned pastor, and prayer for healing.

Peter's Denial and the Grace That Restores

Peter's Denial and the Grace That Restores

Preached during a communion service, this message opens in Galatians 3, where Paul declares that everyone baptized into Christ is one - no Jew or Greek, slave or free, male or female. Gathered around the bread and the cup, the church is reminded that it is a single body, joined to Christ and to one another. The heart of the sermon is the story of Peter. Sure that he would never fall, Peter followed Jesus from a distance, warmed himself at the enemy's fire, and denied his Lord three times. Yet Jesus had already prayed for him, and after the resurrection He met Peter again by another fire, asked three times 'Do you love Me?', and restored his calling with the words 'Feed My sheep.' From this the preacher draws a sharp line between mercy and grace, warns that pride drives grace away, and shows how we can deny Christ by our words, by our silence, or by our deeds. Sharing his own testimony of being rescued from a life of sin, he points the church to the cross and to the table, where the body and blood of Jesus cleanse us and reunite us with the Father.

Walking in the Light, Healing Broken Hearts

Walking in the Light, Healing Broken Hearts

Anton Kolganov opens with his own story - twenty-one years lost in darkness and addiction until the light of the gospel reached him through an unlikely friend. From there he builds the seminar around a simple picture: every person is like a clay vessel, and sooner or later loss, trauma, or sin leaves us cracked. Like the Eastern craft of mending broken pottery with gold, God does not hide our wounds but heals them with gold - His Word, refined like gold tried in fire, restoring the brokenhearted. The heart of the message is learning to walk in the light. Drawing on 1 John 1, he reminds us that God is light, and the closer we step toward Him the smaller the shadow of sin falls behind us. Using the picture of four windows of the soul - what we show, what we hide, what we cannot see in ourselves, and what only God knows - he shows how openness before God and others, honest confession, and a willingness to receive correction steadily enlarge the open part of our lives. This, he says, is the slow work of being made holy. Finally he warns against handing people tired, standard answers when their wounds are deep, and against running to false comforters - food, work, screens, even hidden habits - instead of resting in God alone. Real soul care reaches past the fruit to the root, lets the Holy Spirit, the true Comforter, expose the lies we believe, and replaces them with the truth that alone makes us free.

Examine Your Heart, Stay Awake for Christ

Examine Your Heart, Stay Awake for Christ

This first communion service of the new year opened with worship and the reading of Psalm 103, then turned to the story of Haman and Mordecai in the book of Esther. Despite wealth, position, and honor, Haman let one small offense - Mordecai refusing to bow - poison his heart, until his hatred consumed him and the gallows he built for another became his own end. The preacher warned that we, too, store up grudges like jars of preserves, dating each offense and reopening them in the next argument, until the bitterness ferments and bursts. Drawing on Ephesians 4 and Colossians 3, he urged the church to put off anger, malice, and pride, to put on Christ, and to forgive one another as Christ forgave us. Before sharing the bread and cup, each believer was called to search his own heart and receive blessing rather than judgment. After communion, a New Year message from 1 Thessalonians 5 called the church to stay awake and sober. The whole world sleeps in spiritual darkness or staggers drunk on sin, but the children of light watch for the Lord's return. If you imagine only a week left to live and know something needs fixing, being ready means correcting it today, not postponing it.

Christ, the Gift Above All Gifts

Christ, the Gift Above All Gifts

This Christmas service celebrated the birth of Jesus Christ. The pastor reminded the church that we often miss the full joy of Christmas because we do not pause to ponder what really happened: God left the glory of heaven and came to earth to save us. Quoting Romans 3:23, that all have sinned and fall short of God's glory, he stressed that no one enters God's kingdom by good works, beautiful songs, or even sermons; only Jesus opens the way. The preacher compared the greatest gift of our lives to the famous Rockefeller Center tree, which after the season is sawn into boards and used to build a home for someone in need. In the same way, the birth of Christ is a gift no one earned. Reading Mark 1:15 and Acts 2:21, he proclaimed that the time is fulfilled, the kingdom is near, and everyone who calls on the name of the Lord will be saved. Sharing his own wonder at God's mercy, he said the clearest proof that Christ was born is the lives of people God has saved, healed, and set free. He invited everyone present and watching online to receive God's gift that day, led a prayer of repentance, and urged new believers to find a church and live by the Word of God.

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.

Why Will You Die? God's Call to Life

Why Will You Die? God's Call to Life

The preacher opens with Solomon's warning in Ecclesiastes 7:17 - do not give yourself to sin or die before your time. He recalls visiting his father's grave back in Russia, where his cousin pointed out how many of the graves belonged to young people lost to the wave of drugs, crime, and alcohol in the 1990s. Sin, he insists, is never harmless: it brings death, breaks up families, and burns up lives. God makes His good, pleasing, and perfect will known in two ways - through His written Word, and through the conscience He has placed in every heart. Drawing on 1 John 3, Romans 2, and David sparing Saul in the cave, he shows that God often speaks quietly yet powerfully through our conscience, leading us to repentance and steering us off the wrong road. A large part of the message warns about the tongue. Death and life are in its power (Proverbs 18:21); a word can wound, kill joy, or bless. He urges us to keep our lips from evil, to speak like choice silver, and to fill our mouths with praise. He closes with the heart of God in Ezekiel 33:11 - God takes no pleasure in the death of a sinner but longs for him to turn and live - and with Christ, sent not to condemn the world but to save it.

Finishing Well: Lessons from King Asa

Finishing Well: Lessons from King Asa

Preached the Sunday after a hurricane passed over Florida, this message calls believers to examine their hearts and their relationships - with God, with family, and within the church. The pastor reminds us that storms tend to drive us to prayer, but the real test is whether we keep seeking God in the quiet, ordinary days that follow. Drawing on Ecclesiastes 7:8 - the end of a matter is better than its beginning - he warns that many people, even great servants of God like Gideon, Saul, and Solomon, started well yet stumbled at the finish. The life of King Asa is the central example: he tore down idols, led a revival, and trusted God for a great victory, yet after twenty-five peaceful years he stopped seeking the Lord, leaned on human alliances and physicians, rejected the prophet's warning, and died poorly. The call is to stay humble and patient, to abide in Christ daily, and to finish the race stronger than we began. Our spiritual condition is our own responsibility, and the path of the righteous should shine brighter and brighter until full day.

At the Lord's Table: Trust and True Repentance

At the Lord's Table: Trust and True Repentance

The church gathers around the Lord's Table to remember the death and suffering of Jesus, whose blood brings forgiveness of sins and victory over sin. The pastor opens by calling the congregation to pray for protection from an approaching hurricane, reminding everyone that the fervent prayer of God's people moves Him to answer. The first message, drawn from Exodus 14 and Revelation 3:7, pictures Israel trapped between the mountains and the sea with Pharaoh's army closing in behind. God led them into that dead end on purpose, so that His name would be glorified. When fear gripped them they cried out to God but also blamed Moses. The call is to stop panicking, be still, and trust the sovereign God who opens doors no one can shut, surrendering our will to the Father just as Jesus prayed, not my will but yours. At communion the church receives the broken body and blood, with a testimony that by Christ's wounds we are healed, including a pastor's own healing of his arm and leg after months of believing prayer. The closing message from Matthew 3 and the story of Zacchaeus warns that repentance must bear real fruit. Confessing sin with the mouth while still clinging to it is empty chaff, but genuine repentance changes the life and removes the stumbling block.

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.

The Tender Heart of the Anointed

The Tender Heart of the Anointed

Drawing on the life of David, the preacher explored what it means to be a man after God's own heart (Acts 13:22). The truest mark of a heart that carries God's anointing is its tenderness toward sin: when David merely cut the corner of Saul's robe, and later when he numbered the people, his heart was struck with grief and he repented. This sensitivity, not Bible knowledge or eloquence, is the real evidence of God's presence. He warned that many believers are rich in information yet starving for the anointing, drawn to teachers who flatter their itching ears (2 Timothy 4:3). David refused to lift his hand against the Lord's anointed even when he had the chance, and he honored Saul even after his death. The anointing we have received abides in us and teaches us all things (1 John 2:27). A second message called the church to live as people led by the Holy Spirit, the true author of the book of Acts. We come together not to judge the singing or the preaching but to be changed; a church without the Spirit is only a mausoleum. Jesus calls us to be His witnesses (Acts 1:8) - those who have actually seen and experienced Him - in our own city and to the ends of the earth. The service closed with prayer for a grieving family and for the nation.

Do This in Remembrance of Me

Do This in Remembrance of Me

This Sunday service was given over to the Lord's Supper. The pastor read from 1 Corinthians 11, where Paul passes on what he received from the Lord: the bread is Christ's body broken for us, the cup is the new covenant in His blood, and we keep this table in remembrance of Him. Before anyone eats the bread or drinks the cup, he must examine his own heart so as not to receive unworthily. To prepare those hearts, the preacher walked through the passion in Mark 14 and 15. He pointed to Mary anointing Jesus in the home of Simon, the leper Christ had healed; to Judas grumbling over the cost and then betraying with a kiss; to the Last Supper; to the hymn sung on the way to the Mount of Olives; to Gethsemane, where Jesus prayed, let this cup pass, yet not My will; and on to the arrest, the trial before Pilate, the crown of thorns, the mocking, Simon of Cyrene, the crucifixion, and the centurion's confession, Truly this man was the Son of God. He urged believers to trust the Word of God rather than their own ideas, to walk the good road every day, and to live ready for the moment life suddenly stops - where would we go then? He shared the joy of an elderly Jewish woman coming to Christ, and invited anyone present to call on the name of Jesus and receive Him. The service closed in prayer as the congregation took the bread and the cup with reverence and thanksgiving.

Don't Miss Your Encounter With Jesus

Don't Miss Your Encounter With Jesus

The service carried two linked messages. A visiting brother who serves with the youth opened by teaching on the Holy Spirit as the Helper Jesus promised in John 14 - the Comforter who never condemns but convicts in love. Using the picture of a trampoline whose proper tool was hidden inside the box the whole time, he reminded the church that God has already given everything we need in his Spirit; the gift is not meant to sit and gather dust, but to be used as we walk in obedience. The main message contrasted two wealthy men in Luke. The rich young ruler came to Jesus with a question, but walked away sad when the answer cost more than he was willing to pay. Zacchaeus, by contrast, had one consuming desire - simply to see Jesus - and let nothing stand in his way: not his short stature, not the crowd, not his reputation, not his shameful past. That hunger led to a personal encounter, and the encounter produced real repentance: he gave back far more than he had taken, and salvation came to his house. The preacher closed at the cross. We are Barabbas, the guilty one set free while the innocent Jesus took our place. The crowd called his blood down on themselves and their children, yet what the enemy meant as a curse God turned to blessing, for that blood still cleanses, frees, and washes us white as snow, reaching our families and generations. The call was simple: like Zacchaeus, fix your eyes on Jesus and do not miss the moment of encounter today.

Ready for Communion and the Marriage of the Lamb

Ready for Communion and the Marriage of the Lamb

This communion service centers on how we approach the Lord's Table. Before we share the bread and the cup, we must examine ourselves, reconcile with anyone who holds something against us, and judge our own hearts, so that the supper becomes a blessing and not a judgment. Paul warns that whoever takes it unworthily becomes guilty of the body and blood of the Lord. The preacher ties together two suppers - the communion we keep on earth and the marriage supper of the Lamb in heaven. They cannot be separated. Just as people set aside a day of fasting and self-searching before communion, we must live ready every day for Christ's return, because He comes at an hour we do not expect, and the door closes on those who are not prepared. Preparation means letting go. As wheat is parted from the chaff and grapes are pressed into wine, the trials of life refine us into one bread, one body. We are joined vertically to God and horizontally to one another, and no one can claim to love God while refusing to love a neighbor. Calvary is not only our past; it is our present and our future.

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.

Made New in Christ: A Carpathian Testimony

Made New in Christ: A Carpathian Testimony

A guest preacher, Brother Vasyl from the Ivano-Frankivsk region of Ukraine near Kolomyia, serves the church with both song and testimony. After a prayer thanking God for gathering His people and longing for Christ's return, he speaks of the suffering of war in Ukraine and how the church there does not stand aside but actively helps people and prays for peace and freedom. Through a song of thanksgiving he praises God for daily bread, clean water, a child's smile, and above all the cross of Golgotha that forgave his sin and called him God's child. He then recounts his story: born into a large, poor family, a gifted singer and musician who gained local fame but slid into drinking and by the age of thirty had lost everything, becoming useless to everyone. Curiosity about a neighbor who had repented led him to a service in Kolomyia, where he came forward, knelt, and prayed in his own simple words: God, reveal to me all the truth. He found a new family in Christ. Despite fierce opposition from his village and even his own father, his wife soon believed too, and over time hearts and attitudes changed. He reminds us that all have sinned, that there is no other name under heaven by which we are saved, and that anyone in Christ is a new creation.

The Honey Trap: Guarding the Temple of the Spirit

The Honey Trap: Guarding the Temple of the Spirit

Preached on the Day of Pentecost, this service celebrates the coming of the Holy Spirit, who descended on the first believers in Jerusalem and gave birth to the church that devoted itself to teaching, fellowship, the breaking of bread, and prayer (Acts 2:42). Because that same Spirit now lives inside every believer, our bodies have become His temple, and the enemy aims his entire kingdom at ruining that temple. The main message, called the honey trap, warns against the seductive temptations the devil sets, especially sexual sin. Joseph fled from Potiphar's wife (Genesis 39), while David lingered too long on the rooftop and fell with Bathsheba. Like a rabbit frozen by a python's hypnotic gaze, a long second look can paralyze and trap us, which is why Paul says not to negotiate but to flee (1 Corinthians 6:18-20). The preacher offers practical guards: wear your wedding ring, always speak well of your spouse, honor the marriage covenant as seriously as your covenant with God, and run from danger instead of lingering. And if someone has already fallen, the devil whispers that it is over, but God calls for repentance. David repented and was forgiven, though painful consequences remained, so run to God and not away from Him.

Boldness to Enter God's Presence

Boldness to Enter God's Presence

Drawing on Hebrews 10:19-22 and Romans 5:21, the preacher reminds the church that sin once reigned in us unto death, but now, through the righteousness of Christ, grace has come to reign and given believers boldness to enter the holy place by the blood of Jesus. This boldness is not arrogance but settled assurance, and it rests on a clean conscience, for if our own heart condemns us, God is greater than our heart. Such boldness is also the fruit of love made perfect, so that we may stand without shame in the day of judgment. He then warns of four things that quietly rob us of confidence before God: unconfessed sin that crouches at the door waiting to master us, the fear of people that lays a snare, vows made to God and never fulfilled, and the double standards of a hypocritical heart, illustrated by the woman caught in adultery, where every accuser found his own guilt. Finally he shows how lost boldness is restored. Come to yourself and admit where you actually stand, repent and change the way you live, walk in sincerity with God and people, and stay constant in fellowship with the Lord. Only the blood of Christ cleanses the conscience and lifts away guilt, so that we can look God in the eyes without lowering our heads.

Wash Your Heart and Return to the Lord

Wash Your Heart and Return to the Lord

The service opens with praise for the resurrection and the reminder that the God who saved us never abandons us. Using the story of two teenagers stranded far off course on the water and rescued by a stranger who fed them and stayed close until they reached home, the preacher pictures a Savior who not only rescues but keeps giving living water and heavenly bread. Christ himself prayed with loud cries and tears, and he hears ours. John 3:16 holds the whole gospel, and Isaiah 53 shows how he died as the silent Lamb, wounded for our sins, raised for our justification, with his Spirit now living in us. The evening message, called God and His Bride, turns to Jeremiah. God keeps calling unfaithful Israel home, only asking them to acknowledge their sin, and above all he watches the heart. He compares the heart to soil and asks us to wash it, circumcise it, and cut away evil so his word can take root. Repentance, not ritual, brings healing, and like a surgeon God sometimes allows pain so that a stubborn heart finally cries out, as Manasseh did in prison. A stiff-necked heart resists, saying we will not walk in it and we will not listen. The preacher closes with the memory of a dying coworker whose silent, desperate eyes begged for an answer he never fully gave, and with a call to become the fragrance of Christ, ready to bring hope to a world that groans for it.