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Salvation

44 sermons on this topic

His Name Is Jesus, the Holy Lord of All

His Name Is Jesus, the Holy Lord of All

The gathering opens with a heartfelt call to lift up the name of God, giving Him all the glory in our prayers, our thoughts, and our worship. The leader prays that God would touch every heart so that when the people return home they would carry power to overcome and keep moving forward in faith. The congregation greets one another and rejoices simply to be present in God's house. In worship the church proclaims that there is only One strong enough to save and One who conquered the grave. Jesus holds the keys of death and hell, healing flows from His name, and by His blood our sins are washed away. He is named Wonderful, Counselor, Almighty God, and Prince of Peace, the One before whom every knee will bow when He returns to judge the living and the dead. The opening worship closes with a vision drawn from Isaiah: the Lord seated high upon His throne, robed in glory, the temple filled with His presence, and the angels circling Him crying, "Holy, holy, You are holy, Lord of all." It is an invitation to humble our hearts and simply desire His nearness.

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.

The Living Christ and a Life Worth Imitating

The Living Christ and a Life Worth Imitating

The service opened with a reminder that Christ took our guilt upon Himself. Like a just king who would not spare even his own guilty mother from the law, but covered her with his own body and bore the blows in her place, Jesus by His pure sacrifice and blood justified us and opened the way to God. The first message, from a visiting preacher, centered on the resurrection. Drawing on 1 Corinthians 15, he recounted how the risen Christ appeared to Cephas, the twelve, more than five hundred witnesses, and finally to Paul. The empty tomb, the hearts that burned on the road to Emmaus, and disciples who once hid in fear yet later preached boldly even unto death all testify that Jesus is alive today. The resurrection, he stressed, is our justification: Christ died for our sins and rose to rescue us from eternal death and make us children of God. Using 1 John 1:7, he showed that the blood of Jesus cleanses as long as it keeps circulating - just as blood purifies the body while it stays within, so we are kept clean as we walk in the light and remain in fellowship with one another and with Christ. He closed with a personal testimony of God's protection during a hard trip to renew his children's passports. The second message turned to the power of example. Surveying the godly kings of Judah - Jehoshaphat, Jotham, Hezekiah, and Josiah - the preacher showed that parents, and especially mothers and grandmothers, shape the generations that follow. Yet Hezekiah and Josiah walked with God even though their fathers did not, because they humbled themselves before the Scriptures. The call was clear: imitate Paul as he imitated Christ, be holy as God is holy, and leave a Christ-centered example for those who come after us.

I Trust in God Because Christ Is Risen

I Trust in God Because Christ Is Risen

On this Easter Sunday the congregation celebrates the resurrection of Christ. Reading 1 Corinthians 15, the preacher proclaims that Christ is the firstfruits raised from the dead, and everyone who has received Him by faith has been raised together with Him. From Proverbs 3:5 he draws his theme: trust in the Lord with all your heart. Because Christ is risen, we can face every difficulty by declaring, 'I trust in God.' Our thoughts and words shape us, so when we confess our hope our heart turns toward His help. Through the hardest moments - Jesus in Gethsemane, David weeping at Ziklag, the apostles in despair - God's answer arrived on the third day. Like ships passing slowly but surely through the Panama Canal, our problems are resolved in God's time; like the eagle that endures a painful renewal, those who hope in the Lord renew their strength (Isaiah 40). The preacher leaves three anchors for the soul: I am a child of God, the blood of Jesus covers me, and the One who lives in me is greater than the one in the world. Give every need into God's hands, for Christ is risen, He is alive, and He is coming again.

Christ Our Passover: Remembering His Sacrifice

Christ Our Passover: Remembering His Sacrifice

On Good Friday the church gathers to keep the feast described in 1 Corinthians 5:8 - Christ our Passover, the Lamb of God slain for us. Reading Luke 23, the preacher points to three groups at the cross: the soldiers who carried out the execution, the crowd and priests who mocked, and the believers who knew the Lord and watched from a distance in sorrow. We belong to that last group - those who have come to know Him and the power of His blood. The heart of the evening is remembrance. Just as God told Israel to keep the manna, write His commands on their garments, and raise stones from the Jordan as a memorial, Jesus said, "Do this in remembrance of me." We were redeemed not with silver or gold but with His precious blood. The old sacrifices of goats and calves only covered sin, but the blood of Christ cleanses and justifies us once for all. A great price was paid, and that price is what makes us precious in God's eyes. The message ends at the Lord's table. Christ bore not only physical agony but inner anguish in Gethsemane, sweating drops of blood, to win our peace as the Prince of Peace. As we eat the bread and drink the cup we become one with Him, sharing in His death and resurrection, and we remember that whoever is forgiven much, loves much.

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.

One Flock, One Shepherd, A Fruitful Life

One Flock, One Shepherd, A Fruitful Life

The service opens with worship and a call to praise God as His own people, then turns to Jesus the Good Shepherd. Just as Jesus had compassion on the crowds who were like sheep without a shepherd, He still calls His own by name, and they follow because they recognize His voice (John 10; Mark 6:34). Walking through passages in the Gospels, Romans, and Acts, the preacher shows that Christ has gathered other sheep, the Gentiles, so that now there is one flock and one Shepherd, with no distinction between Jew and Gentile. Everyone who calls on the name of the Lord is saved by grace through the blood of Christ, never by our own goodness or works. A visiting preacher then opens the parable of the sower and teaches that a truly fruitful believer is a steadfast one. The seed dies where there is no deep root, or where the cares and riches of this age choke the word, while the good soil keeps the word in an honest heart and bears fruit with patience. He urges the church to stay constant every day, in Scripture, in prayer, in praise, in gathering with the saints, in serving, and in doing good, following the example of the first church in Acts 2. Throughout the gathering runs the reminder that sheep depend completely on their Shepherd and on the shepherds He appoints, along with a sober call, carried by a poem about a coming account, to examine our walk before we stand before God. The congregation is encouraged to invest in their children and to support the renovation of their church home.

The Price He Paid: Remembering Christ's Suffering

The Price He Paid: Remembering Christ's Suffering

This Lord's Supper service was devoted to the suffering of Jesus Christ and the price He paid for our salvation. The preacher opened in Luke 2, pointing out three ways people come into God's house: some are drawn by the Spirit like Simeon, some by the faithful habit of prayer and fasting like Anna the prophetess, and some simply by custom like the family of Jesus at Passover. Whatever brings us, he said, it is good to be in the house of the Lord. Tracing the cross through Scripture, he showed how Abraham's offering of Isaac on Mount Moriah pointed forward to the Father giving His only Son on that same mountain. Isaiah foretold centuries in advance a Servant whose face was marred beyond any man, who gave His back to those who struck Him and bore our iniquities, so that by His wounds we are healed. Christ went to Golgotha willingly, never cursing His tormentors, drinking the cup of suffering so that we could receive the cup of blessing. As the congregation broke the bread and shared the cup, the message turned to grace. We are precious not because of ourselves, dust that returns to dust, but because Christ paid so great a price with His blood. Remembering His death proclaims His victory until He comes again, and it gives believers strength to resist sin and to rise after a fall, just as Peter was restored after his denial.

Pray with Thanksgiving, Live as Heirs

Pray with Thanksgiving, Live as Heirs

The service opened with a call to be a good fish in God's net (Matthew 13:47), and the preachers kept returning to one theme: gratitude. Drawing on 1 Peter 4:7 and Philippians 4:6, brother Mykola urged the church to pray watchfully, without letting the mind wander, and to bring every request to God wrapped in thanksgiving rather than complaint. Using the story of Tertullus flattering Felix to accuse Paul (Acts 24), he observed that the people of this world know how to win a hearing through praise, while believers too often come to God only with demands. Like a child who asks kindly instead of scolding, we should approach our Father with thankful hearts - especially in a land of peace, while brothers and sisters in Ukraine endure war. The main message from Ephesians 1 unfolded who we are in Christ: chosen, redeemed by His blood, adopted, forgiven by grace, made heirs, and sealed by the Holy Spirit as a guarantee. All of this is to the praise of His glory, so that we ourselves become the glory of His grace. The same price was paid for every believer, so none is worth less than another. We were urged to guard against the devil's counterfeits and to carry an outward, visible gratitude that flows from salvation, not one kept hidden inside.

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.

The Cross: Foolishness to the World, Power to Us

The Cross: Foolishness to the World, Power to Us

On this first Sunday of the New Year the church gathered for communion, remembering the death and resurrection of Jesus. The preacher invited everyone to climb to Golgotha in their hearts, recalling how Jesus foretold His suffering in Mark 10 and how Abraham went up the mountain only for God to provide the Lamb in his son's place. What we remember at the table is not a defeat but a victory over sin and the devil, a victory we share by faith. The main message came from 1 Corinthians 1:18: the word of the cross is foolishness to those who are perishing, but to us who are being saved it is the power of God. It sounds like folly to the world because it exposes the sin in every heart (Romans 3), because it demands that Christ be placed above family, comfort, and self (Matthew 10), and because it calls us to die to ourselves so that Christ may live in us (Galatians 2:20). The world, driven by the lust of the flesh, the lust of the eyes, and the pride of life, will not surrender these things. In God's kingdom the math is reversed: to gain more you give more, and to be great you become a servant. The service closed with a sober warning. A brother who had announced that Christ would return in 2025 repented when it did not happen, and the leaders reminded the church that no one knows the day or hour but the Father alone (Matthew 24:36). Stand on the Word as your foundation, and never forget that you are saved because He first loved you.

Let It Be According to Your Word

Let It Be According to Your Word

This final service of the year is a time to look back and give thanks. Across 52 Sundays and many weeknight gatherings God spoke, taught, and led His people, so the call now is not only to count blessings but to remember the revelations He gave and ask honestly whether we obeyed them. Seek His kingdom first, the preacher reminds us, and He will supply all that we need. The main message centers on the words 'Let it be according to Your word'. Brother Vasyl points to Noah, who did everything God commanded, and to Mary, who answered, 'Let it be to me according to Your word'. The ark's door was shut by God Himself and those outside were lost, but in Christ the door of salvation now stands open to everyone who believes. The greatest event in history is not a landing on the moon but the coming of the Savior, and we step into 2026 trusting that God will be with us, guard us, and bless us as He promised. The evening overflows with thanksgiving and testimony. Believers recount healing after a failed surgery, deliverance from a dangerous infection, rescue from an allergic crisis, and one man's dramatic conversion 52 years ago that began with a New Year's encounter and a prophetic word. Trials reorder our priorities, they testify, and in every situation God is teaching us, holding our right hand, and proving Himself faithful.

Christmas Joy and the Gift of His Church

Christmas Joy and the Gift of His Church

On the last Sunday of the year the church kept the Christmas spirit alive, still celebrating the birth of Christ. Reading Luke 2, the preacher noted that the rare appearance of angels to the shepherds marked something extraordinary: the Savior's birth is announced as great joy for all people. That joy is meant for us, which is why believers rightly rejoice, give gifts, and gather together, even where war rages and the power is out. Yet Christmas is far more than joy, it is the Incarnation, God taking on human flesh. Throughout history people have tried to become gods to escape death, but every ruler who claimed divinity still died. Only in the gospel is it the opposite: God chose to become man, and He succeeded, in Bethlehem. He did it for one reason, to save us, becoming Emmanuel, God with us, who understands our weakness because He walked our road. A second message called believers to treasure the church. The church is Christ's bride and body, bought with His blood, and to join the church is to join the Lord Himself. Citing Hebrews 10:25, the pastor urged the people not to forsake the assembly, for no one finishes the Christian life alone. When we gather, Christ's blood cleanses us, we build one another up, and we sing to the Lord. His charge for the new year: hold to the Lord with a sincere heart, walk in the fear of God, and bear one another's burdens in love.

The Christmas Gift You Can Open

The Christmas Gift You Can Open

On Christmas morning the church gathered to celebrate the birth of Jesus, opening with the angels' words to the shepherds in Luke 2: "Do not be afraid, for I bring you good news of great joy... for unto you is born this day a Savior, who is Christ the Lord." The preacher reminded everyone that Christ was born for you personally and for all people, to save them from sin and to give them mercy and hope. The central message compared Christmas to a wrapped gift. However precious, a present changes nothing while it stays closed; joy comes only when it is opened and received. God the Father has given us a gift that is not a thing, a tradition, or a religion, but His own Son, Jesus Christ (John 3:16). Yet a gift can be refused - "He came to His own, and His own received Him not" (John 1:11) - and the greatest tragedy of Christmas is that the Savior came and some still turn Him away. Through the story of a rich man who sent a messenger door to door with a document that cancelled debts, gave a new beginning, and granted an inheritance, the preacher showed that the gift must be received personally. One man refused out of pride, another because he was too busy, but a poor man who did not even understand simply said, "If it is a gift, I accept it," and received new life. For some, Christmas remains only a story; for those who open it, it becomes salvation, life, and the riches of heaven.

Jesus, Our Prince of Peace

Jesus, Our Prince of Peace

This Christmas message begins with a simple truth: without the birth of Jesus there is no cross and no resurrection. The blood of Christ points us straight to Calvary and to what He accomplished for each of us. Drawing on Isaiah 9:6, the preacher meditates on one of the Messiah's names - Prince of Peace - and asks what kind of peace this child actually brings. He traces that peace through three relationships. First, peace with God: sin separated Adam from his holy Creator, but through the death of the Son we are reconciled to the Father (Romans 5). Second, peace with one another: sin breeds division at home, in marriage, and with neighbors, yet when we say with Paul "no longer I, but Christ," we begin to forgive and embrace, because He first forgave us. Third, peace in the heart: instead of drowning in worry and fear, we run to Jesus, who numbers the hairs of our head and cares for us more than for the birds. The sermon closes by reminding believers who they are - a chosen people, once not a people but now the people of God, carrying a sure hope of eternal life and the new Jerusalem where God will wipe away every tear. Following Christ does mean a daily fight against sin and the flesh, a cross we should not try to make lighter, but it is a privilege rather than a burden.

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.

Blessed Is the God-Fearing Family

Blessed Is the God-Fearing Family

On the eve of Christmas the church gathers for evening worship, and the pastor opens with Matthew 18:11 - the Son of Man came to seek and to save what was lost. Christ did not come to found a new religion or to sort people into the more holy and the less holy, but like the shepherd who carries home even the dirty, neglected sheep, He came to rescue sinners. The main message turns to Psalm 112: blessed is the one who fears the Lord and delights in His commandments. True blessedness is being happy in God, living a holy life, and serving Him not grudgingly but with gladness. The forgiveness of sins, the preacher says, is the best Christmas gift of all. Looking at the families of Zechariah and Elizabeth and of Mary, he shows that ordinary, faithful homes - marked by prayer, humility, and patience rather than status - are the ones God chooses to use. That leads to a heartfelt word to parents: faith is passed on in the home through the rhythm of daily life, not just through words. Children imitate what they see, so honesty, quick repentance, and unhurried family time matter more than a perfect record. A closing reflection on the Nativity in Luke 2 reminds the church that Jesus was born to lift unclean, lost people out of the mire and make them His holy nation.

God Uses Ordinary People of Faith

God Uses Ordinary People of Faith

This communion service opened with a call to humility from James 4:10 and the assurance of Romans 8 that if God is for us, no one can stand against us. Christ died for us and now intercedes for us, so even when we fall we should never let go of our faith. The guest preacher, Pastor Choko of Chicago who now leads missions for his fellowship, shared his testimony. By the world's measure he was a negative statistic, a boy who failed third grade and was abandoned by his father, yet God used him just as He once used Gideon. From Hebrews 11:30-31 and the story of Rahab he showed that God deliberately chooses unlikely, imperfect people who live by faith rather than fear. The centurion and the widow with her two coins both teach us to trust God more than our circumstances or our money. Rahab had only seconds to choose the God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob, and the scarlet cord in her window pointed to the blood of Jesus and saved her whole household, placing her in the very lineage of Christ. The challenge was plain: make that choice yourself, serve the Lord, and your family will follow. The gathering closed at the Lord's Table, remembering His broken body and shed blood until He comes.

Abide in the Word, Walk in Freedom

Abide in the Word, Walk in Freedom

The midweek service opens with the Beatitudes and turns to John 8:31-43. Jesus speaks to people who already believe in Him and reminds them that faith is only the starting point. Real discipleship means remaining in His word, because that is where truth is found, and truth is what sets a person free. The preacher compares Scripture to a vaccine against sin that stops working the moment we stop reading it. Using the contrast between a slave and a son, he explains that a slave is bound by sin and lives by his own will, while a son does the Father's works of faith, love, and obedience and stays in the house forever. Through James 1 and a child's Bible-study homework he traces the path from slavery to sonship: honestly face your sin, trust the Son, act like a son or daughter by forgiving and loving and giving freely, and stay close to the Father in prayer and thanksgiving. A second message returns to forgiveness in Matthew 18 and urges careful, honest reading of the Bible. Just as a child colors a picture however he pleases, or commenters answer a question that was never asked, we can read our own ideas into the text. Jesus' parables say the kingdom is 'like' something, an image pointing to a spiritual truth, so our task is to find where the earthly story meets the heavenly lesson. Refusing to forgive is no small matter, because it places us back into the very debt that Christ already paid.

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.

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.

Children, Youth, and Fathers in Christ

Children, Youth, and Fathers in Christ

Reading from 1 John 2:12-14, the guest preacher describes the church as one family made up of believers at different spiritual ages - little children, young men, and fathers - and pictures them as the fingers of a single hand. We all enter the same way: through repentance, with our sins forgiven for Jesus' name's sake, and we remain God's children forever, only by His mercy. The early stages bring the joy of first love, when everything about God, the church, and His people feels wonderful, and the new believer leans completely on the Father, fed on the milk of the Word. But there is a real danger in staying there and seeking God only for His blessings. In time the Lord brings each of us face to face with our own Goliath; what carried us as children no longer works, and through that struggle young believers learn to overcome the evil one because the Word abides in them. Drawing on the prodigal son, Malachi 4:6, and 1 John 3, the message calls the church to grow toward maturity and to love one another across these differences - patient, forgiving, and supportive, since we are all children of one Father whom we will one day see face to face.

The Value of the Soul and Honest Prayer

The Value of the Soul and Honest Prayer

The midweek service opened with Paul's prayer in Ephesians that believers would be strengthened in the inner being by the Holy Spirit, so that every desire and plan would be brought under God's will. From there two connected truths were unfolded: how much our souls are worth to God, and how openly we are invited to speak with Him. The first message reminded us that the soul cannot be bought back with silver or gold, but only with the precious blood of Christ (1 Peter 1:18-19). No one can climb up to heaven by his own effort. Drawing on the rich man and Lazarus, the half-shekel ransom of Exodus, and David's sinful census, the preacher warned that a person can gain the whole world and still lose his soul (Matthew 16:26). He shared his own testimony of coming to Christ near the age of thirty-three and then patiently praying for unbelieving relatives, urging us not to grow weary. The second message taught that prayer is honest conversation. Looking at Lamentations 2:19 and Psalm 88, it showed that we may pour out grief, anger, and unanswered questions before God without pretending to be more spiritual than we really are. God knows how to listen, and even when no immediate answer comes, His grace fills the emptied heart with peace.

Jesus Christ, the Bread of Life from Heaven

Jesus Christ, the Bread of Life from Heaven

This is a communion service. After worship and a prayer remembering Christ's agony in Gethsemane and his death at Golgotha, and a blessing over the youngest children, the preacher opens John 6 to show who Jesus really is - the true bread that comes down from heaven. The crowd followed Jesus not because they grasped the miracle but because they had eaten and were filled, so he urges them, and us, to seek not perishable food but the food that endures to eternal life. He contrasts the manna in the wilderness, a daily wonder from God's hand for forty years, with Jesus himself. The fathers ate manna and still died, but Jesus is the living bread: whoever comes to him will never hunger and whoever believes will never thirst. The Jews grumbled because they knew his earthly family and would not receive him as the Messiah from heaven. Only those born again and taught by the Spirit grasp the meaning of the cross, for the natural mind calls it foolishness. The Lord's Supper is not meant to satisfy physical hunger but is real participation in the body and blood of Christ. Before partaking we must examine ourselves: are we at peace with God and with one another, and have we forgiven as Christ and Stephen forgave their killers? Remembering God's eternal love and the covenant sealed in his blood, the church proclaims his death until he comes, and he will surely come, so we must be ready.

Pentecost: Born Again and Filled with Power

Pentecost: Born Again and Filled with Power

On Pentecost the church celebrates its birthday - the day the Holy Spirit was poured out, just as Joel prophesied and Peter declared in Acts 2. The wind and fire that filled the upper room are signs of God's presence, the same presence that once led Israel through the wilderness and filled the temple. But the preachers stress a new reality: God no longer dwells only with us - His Spirit now lives inside us. At Sinai the law was given and three thousand fell; at Pentecost the Spirit came and three thousand were saved. The law worked from the outside, but the Spirit works from within, transforming hearts and pointing every one of us to Christ. Believers become living letters written by the Spirit of the living God, and a Spirit-filled life looks so different that others begin to ask what we have. Guest preacher Pastor Thomas adds that the Spirit was poured out for one great purpose: to reach people with the gospel, illustrated by his young daughter who held an elevator door with her foot and led a whole family to Christ in thirty seconds. Just as Jesus entered the world the lawful way, through birth, we enter God's kingdom only by being born again. To receive the Spirit we must be washed by Christ's blood and truly thirst for Him, for only then can we walk in the love that is the fruit of the Spirit.

One Bread, One Body at the Lord's Table

One Bread, One Body at the Lord's Table

Gathered for a communion service, the church remembers the death of the Lord Jesus Christ. Drawing on Galatians 6:14, the preacher calls believers to boast in nothing but the cross and to rejoice as children of the King of kings in everything Christ has done for them. Looking ahead to Pentecost, he turns to the early church in Acts, who broke bread daily from house to house with glad and sincere hearts, praising God while the Lord added the saved to their number. Their secret was one heart and one soul, given by the Holy Spirit. From 1 Corinthians he shows that the cup and the bread are a real sharing in the blood and body of Christ, so the table binds believers to Golgotha and to one another - we wait for each other, forgive, and never come in division. Through the bronze serpent of Numbers, John 3:16, and Isaiah 53 he leads the church to the cross, urging everyone to make it personal: my sins and my sicknesses were laid on Him. He invites them to receive first the oil of the Spirit and then the cleansing blood, and the service closes by taking the bread and the cup, proclaiming the Lord's death until He comes.

Christ Is Risen, So We Might Live

Christ Is Risen, So We Might Live

The Easter service opens with the joyful greeting, Christ is risen, He is risen indeed. Reading John 20:19-20, the pastor recalls how the risen Jesus stood among His frightened disciples behind locked doors, spoke peace (shalom), and showed them His wounded hands and side. The same living Lord wants to fill our hearts with that Easter joy and light today. The main message asks a question few of us ever consider: what if Christ had not risen? Scripture answers that our faith would be empty, we would be deceived, and we would still be carrying every sin we ever committed - tens of thousands of them across a lifetime. But the wages of sin is death, and no one can buy their own freedom, so God sent His Son to die for our sins and rise for our justification. To share in His resurrection we must first die - to self, to sin, to the world - so we can walk in newness of life (Romans 6). A life unchanged from its old worldly pattern shows we have not yet truly risen. The closing word turns to hope: like the neatly folded grave cloth that quietly promised Jesus would return, and like a freed prisoner crying out, Mom, I am alive, the risen Christ is coming back for His people. Maranatha - be ready.

Christ Our Passover, Slain For Us

Christ Our Passover, Slain For Us

On the night before His death Jesus rose from the supper and washed His disciples' feet, leaving an example of humble, voluntary service (John 13). Even with the cross before Him, His concern was not for Himself but for those around Him, and He calls us to lift one another up just as He came to lift us out of our troubles and into fellowship with the Father. Drawing on Exodus 12 and 1 Corinthians 5:7, the message recalls Israel's slavery in Egypt, the ten plagues, and the spotless lamb whose blood on the doorposts caused God's judgment to pass over His people. Jesus is that flawless Lamb (1 Peter 1:18-19); we are redeemed not by silver or gold but by His precious blood. Yet the blood must be applied personally - confessed with the mouth and believed in the heart. The congregation then shares the bread and the cup, remembering His broken body and the new covenant in His blood (1 Corinthians 11). Because we eat from one loaf, we belong to God and to one another as His body. The service ends with a call to answer such love by giving Him our whole life - not half, but all of it - just as He set Himself apart for us (John 17:19).

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.

The Joy of Christmas and the King of Kings

The Joy of Christmas and the King of Kings

This post-Christmas Sunday service opened with Isaiah 9:6, celebrating the child born to us whose names are Wonderful Counselor, Mighty God, Everlasting Father, and Prince of Peace. In a world torn by war and tragedy, the only true peace is found in Jesus, who came for each of us. The message reminded us that Christmas is a season of real joy because Christ was born, died, rose, and is alive today. Many lose the meaning of the season in gifts and fading New Year resolutions, but God offers a deeper blessing. Drawing on Psalm 37:4, the preacher showed that when we delight in the Lord our desires change and begin to match His. Solomon asked not for riches but for wisdom to serve God's people, and God gave him wisdom plus wealth and honor beyond every king. Jesus is the greater example: He left heaven's glory, lived and worked among us, and gave Himself saying not my will but yours. Like Isaiah's vision of the Lord whose robe fills the temple, the train standing for every defeated enemy, Christ is the victorious King of kings who will return in glory. The call is to desire what God desires and to give to others as freely as He gave His Son, for it is more blessed to give than to receive.

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.

God's Amnesty: Forgive as You Were Forgiven

God's Amnesty: Forgive as You Were Forgiven

This Wednesday service in the days before Christmas opened with the angel's announcement to the shepherds and Simeon's prophecy that God's salvation was prepared for all peoples, even those once far off. The first message urged believers not to neglect doing good. Through the parable of the Good Samaritan, Hebrews 13:16, and Galatians 6:10, the preacher reminded the church that the priest and the Levite passed by, but the Samaritan finished the work: he bandaged the wounds, paid the cost, and promised to return. We are called to help personally and right now, not to excuse ourselves with busyness. The central message was titled 'Amnesty.' Seven hundred years before His birth Isaiah foretold the time of salvation, and in the Nazareth synagogue Jesus opened that scroll and declared that the acceptable year of the Lord had come (Luke 4, Isaiah 61). Amnesty is God's full pardon: the Judge lifts the sentence and tells the guilty one to go home free. By the law of liberty (James 2) we have been released, and that grace must reshape how we speak and act. But the warning is sharp: judgment without mercy awaits anyone who refuses to show mercy. Like the servant forgiven ten thousand talents who then choked a fellow servant over a hundred denarii (Matthew 18), we must grant personal amnesty to those who have wronged us. The best Christmas gift, the preacher said, is to forgive from the heart, and to remember the many still locked in the prison of sin who need to hear of God's free pardon.

Raising Children Who Truly Love God

Raising Children Who Truly Love God

This Christmas-season service centers on a sobering question every believing parent must face: will our children love and serve God for themselves, from the heart? Drawing on the story of Eli the high priest and his sons in 1 Samuel, the preacher warns that a person can be deeply involved in ministry and still raise children who do not know the Lord. He draws out three lessons. First, teaching our children to love God is our own responsibility, not the church's or Sunday school's, just as Abraham was chosen to instruct his household and as Proverbs calls grandchildren the crown of the aged. Second, nothing corrodes a child's faith like double standards: Eli quietly took more than his portion and his sons went even further into sin, while Job and Joshua kept their homes blameless ('as for me and my house, we will serve the Lord'). Third, we must be genuinely present in our children's lives; Eli learned of his sons' evil from outsiders, while Job rose early each morning to pray for each child by name. The service closes with a Christmas message. The birth of Christ tore open the wall between God and humanity. Born not in a palace but in the lower room of a humble home and laid in a manger, the King of kings made Himself accessible to everyone, rich or poor, shepherd or wise man, so that anyone could come, worship Him, and receive new life.

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.

How to Build a Sermon That Leads to Christ

How to Build a Sermon That Leads to Christ

This first session of a preaching seminar focuses on the thematic sermon. The teacher warns against the most common mistake - pulling a verse out of its surroundings, like uprooting a plant and replanting it where it cannot grow, and then wondering why God's Word seems powerless in people's lives. Drawing on the second chapter of 1 Corinthians, he reminds us that the gospel - that God would unite all nations in Christ and come to earth Himself - is something no human mind could ever invent; it is revealed to us only by the Holy Spirit. He offers practical tools: topical concordances and Bible guides that gather rightly studied texts by idea rather than by isolated words. A sermon must move, he says, not run flat like the pulse of a dead man. Build it from the known to the unknown and from the simple to the complex, in a clear order. Lead people from problem to diagnosis to cure - speak first about the people, then about the text, then back to the people with something they can actually do tomorrow on the job site, behind the wheel, or at college. Above all, every sermon must show the way out. Like the green EXIT signs hung in dark theaters for those who feared closed rooms, the preacher must let people turn their heads and see the door. No matter what sin or trouble is raised, the ending must be bright and full of grace: sin was defeated by Christ, who died for it. He points to the steps of salvation - hear, believe, repent, confess, and be baptized - and closes with the heart of it all: a sermon is not information, it is transformation.

Rejoice That Your Names Are Written in Heaven

Rejoice That Your Names Are Written in Heaven

The sermon opens with wonder at the miracles of Jesus recorded in the Gospels - healing the sick, casting out demons, raising the dead, commanding the elements of nature, and feeding thousands with a few loaves and fish. The Gospels describe dozens of such signs, yet John reminds us that the whole world could not contain the books needed to record everything Jesus did. These miracles were given to strengthen faith and to glorify God. Turning to Luke 10, the preacher recalls how the seventy disciples returned overjoyed that even demons submitted to them in Jesus' name. The Lord confirmed their authority over the enemy but raised the bar higher: do not rejoice that the spirits obey you, but that your names are written in heaven. Filled with the Holy Spirit, Jesus Himself rejoiced that the Father had revealed His kingdom to simple, childlike hearts, calling blessed the eyes that see what prophets and kings longed to see. The same promises belong to us. Christ still sends His people to proclaim the Gospel and still works miracles, especially on the front lines of the battle for souls. The greatest miracle of all is when one person comes to the Lord and their name is written in heaven, where the angels rejoice over every sinner who repents. We are called to receive this by faith, to rejoice, and to actively share salvation. The closing reminder is plain: faith, trust, and patience come before the miracle, and only when we truly rely on God do we see Him act.

Is Your Name Written in the Book of Life?

Is Your Name Written in the Book of Life?

The service opens in worship with a reminder that the living Christ heals and saves everyone who truly believes, and that the gathered church is itself the house of God, built of living stones. Recalling the boy Jesus in the temple and the rich young ruler's question about eternal life, the preacher presses one urgent matter: are we certain our names are written in the Book of Life? Working through John 3 and First John 5, he stresses that God did not appoint us to wrath but to salvation, and that whoever has the Son already possesses eternal life right now. This should fill believers with joyful confidence rather than fear. A sobering statistic - that a quarter of lifelong churchgoers cannot say with certainty they are saved - frames his appeal to settle the matter today through repentance and faith in the blood of Christ. A second message turns to the brevity of life. Through Psalm 90 and 92, the late conversion of the wealthy Rockefeller, and Joseph's dramatic rise and fall, the preacher reminds us that life is short and not in our control. In the end God will not ask about our achievements but only one thing: are you washed in the blood of Jesus? He calls the church back to Scripture and to persistent prayer.

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.

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.

What Kind of Mother Are You?

What Kind of Mother Are You?

On Mother's Day the pastor honors mothers as carriers of one of the greatest callings on earth. Reading Matthew 10 and 1 Corinthians 7, he shows that a mother 'loses her life' for her children and her husband: bearing children in pain, giving up beauty, health and strength, and often releasing her husband into ministry. Yet whoever loses their life for Christ gains it back, and with a double reward. The main message, 'What kind of mother are you?', retells the birth of Moses (Exodus 2, Hebrews 11). His mother Jochebed, whose name means 'Yahweh is my glory,' hid her son, sealed a basket with pitch, and set him on the river with tears and prayer. In the years she nursed him she planted such godly values that Moses later refused Pharaoh's palace in order to suffer with the people of God. He adds the example of Ronald Reagan's praying mother Nelle and of his own mother, who led her whole family to Christ. The conclusion is simple: a mother's true glory is prayer, and through prayer and example she lays the foundation of her children's faith and shapes where they will spend eternity.

Trusting the Shepherd Who Gave His Life

Trusting the Shepherd Who Gave His Life

This midweek gathering opened with a reminder that God's Word falls on an open heart the way rain and snow fall on an open field (Isaiah 55). It never returns empty but always does its work, so nothing should be allowed to stand between heaven and our hearts. A second brother, reading from 1 Peter 1, spoke humbly of his own frailty, of twice being close to death, and urged the church to keep believing, hoping, and loving, since the wings of the Holy Spirit are faith and humility. Reflecting on Sunday's communion, one preacher took up the hard question of Gethsemane (Luke 22): was Jesus afraid of the cross when He prayed for the cup to pass? Tracing John 10 and 12, Hebrews 5 and 10, he concluded there was no fear, for perfect love casts out fear. The agony, even sweating blood, was the enemy's last assault, and Christ prayed not to die in the garden before reaching Golgotha. An angel strengthened Him so He could finish the work, and a poem about the thief on the cross showed that all of us, like that dying man, were rescued by sheer grace. A further message rested on Psalm 23 and John 10: the Lord is my shepherd. We entrust God with the greatest thing, our eternity, yet often refuse to give Him the small daily worries, though His thoughts are far higher than ours. The service ended with a call to fast and pray for the church, recalling how King Hezekiah carried his crisis straight into the house of God and was delivered.

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.