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Thanksgiving

24 sermons on this topic

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.

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.

Leaving Worship with a Thankful Heart

Leaving Worship with a Thankful Heart

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

Grace That Is Not in Vain

Grace That Is Not in Vain

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

Always Pray and Never Lose Heart

Always Pray and Never Lose Heart

The service opened from Hebrews 4:14-16, urging believers to come boldly to the throne of grace through Jesus, our high priest who understands our weakness. A brother reminded the church that Jesus himself is the living Word (John 1:1), the bread by which we truly live (Matthew 4:4), and that the enemy's chief aim is to snatch that Word from the heart (the parable of the sower). The Word is like a seed: it takes root, grows slowly, and bears fruit only as God prunes us, often through difficulty and pain. The main teaching unfolded as an open question-and-answer on prayer. "Give thanks in everything" does not mean thanking God for sickness or war while begging to be delivered from them; like "pray without ceasing," it must be read in context, not woodenly. Night prayer is not more powerful than day prayer, and no day is magically closer to heaven. God honors the sacrifice of sleep and comfort, but answers come through faith and obedience, not through the clock. Prayer is not a vending machine that dispenses results when we follow the right steps. Using the persistent widow (Luke 18:1), Paul's thorn (2 Corinthians 12:9), and the bowls of incense in Revelation, the preacher urged the church to pray and not lose heart. Sometimes God answers at once, sometimes after years, and sometimes he answers differently than we asked, because only he knows the right time.

Do You Love Me? - The Question Communion Asks

Do You Love Me? - The Question Communion Asks

This communion service is built around one question Jesus asked Peter three times beside the sea: "Do you love Me?" (John 21). The preacher reminds us this question is addressed not only to Peter but to each of us by name - put your own name in his place. At the Lord's table we remember the love Christ showed, the price He paid, and the hope He gives, and we answer Him from the heart. The message leads us to the home of Mary, Martha, and Lazarus (John 12), where Jesus loved to be. Each of them showed love differently: Martha served, Lazarus simply stayed near, and Mary poured out costly perfume. We love Jesus, who is now in heaven, in the same ways - by serving His people, by being with Him, and by worshiping Him. Such service flows not from earning rewards but from a heart overflowing with gratitude for all He has done. Through the parable of the two debtors (Luke 7), the one forgiven more loves more - and that is our story, for much has been forgiven us. Having taken the bread and the cup, the church is urged from 1 Peter 3:11 not to relax like a runner at the finish line, but to keep turning from evil, doing good, and pursuing peace in the week ahead.

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.

Give an Account of Your Stewardship

Give an Account of Your Stewardship

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

Living Worthy of God's Name by His Grace

Living Worthy of God's Name by His Grace

This closing portion of the Sunday service is mostly prayer and blessing. The preacher urges believers to live rightly before God and before people, so that the name of God is never dishonored or mocked, because we carry the name of Christians. Without Jesus Christ we can do nothing; He is the One who changes us, and so the congregation calls on His name over their daily walk. In thanksgiving the church remembers that Christ died and rose for our justification, and that He calls us to live for God and for one another, bearing with one another and shining as salt and light. They give thanks for the Holy Spirit who dwells in them, recalling that the body is His temple, and they ask for grace - the grace that saves and teaches us how to live in this present age, since apart from grace we can do nothing. The service ends with the Lord's Prayer, the reading of prayer requests, and intercession: thanks for an answered prayer over a child's test, joy over a newborn son named Lemuel, and prayers for employment needs and for the healing of an ailing sister and those who care for her. The pastor reminds the people not to bury the truth they hear but to receive it, to be built up as a spiritual house, and sends them out with the apostolic blessing to greet and welcome one another.

Fellowship in the Light, Cleansed by His Blood

Fellowship in the Light, Cleansed by His Blood

The service opens with heartfelt worship and a warm welcome in the name of Jesus Christ. The pastor anchors the gathering in 1 John 1:7 - when we walk in the light as God is in the light, we have fellowship with one another, and the blood of Jesus cleanses us from all sin. Coming together to praise, pray, and hear the Word is not mere routine; it is where the Holy Spirit does His work, convicting hearts and renewing the weary. Drawing on David's example, the pastor reminds us that the saints on earth were David's delight, and his heart rejoiced when he was called to go up to the house of the Lord. Whatever difficulties weigh us down, this Sunday is a blessed moment - many enter the assembly burdened and leave renewed and lifted. The opening prayer overflows with thanksgiving - for Calvary, for the wounds by which we are healed, for the forgiveness of all our sins and the healing of our infirmities. God promises to dwell among a people who gather in unity and worship Him, in the midst of praise rather than complaint.

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.

Give Thanks and Never Stop Praying

Give Thanks and Never Stop Praying

This midweek Easter service centered on the living, risen Christ who still appears to His people - healing, guarding, and answering prayer. Opening from Acts 1, the leaders reminded the church that Jesus showed Himself alive to His disciples by many proofs, and that He still reveals Himself today through His Word and His care. A guest preacher from war-torn Ukraine read Colossians 3 and Deuteronomy 8, urging believers to set their minds on things above and to guard their hearts in seasons of plenty. He warned that good times and hard times both pass, and that comfort can quietly make us forget God and grumble. His two simple charges: never stop giving thanks, and never complain. A brother testified how God healed him and his wife after he simply raised his hand in faith, and the main message drew from 2 Kings 4, where Elisha prayed persistently until the Shunammite woman's son was raised. The recurring call was to keep coming to God, hold tightly to His grace, and refuse to give up - because where we write a period, the risen Lord can still write a comma.

Chosen to Bear Lasting Fruit

Chosen to Bear Lasting Fruit

This missionary Sunday opened with a call to wholehearted worship and a reminder from Acts that the Great Commission begins at home before it spreads through the church and our city. The congregation heard testimonies from a team that served Haitian immigrant communities in the Dominican Republic, and from Christian Road of Life, a Ukrainian ministry carrying aid and the gospel into frontline villages. Every report shared one heartbeat - gratitude. Believers living in deep poverty, and people enduring war, still praised God with joy and clung to Him, convicting comfortable Christians who take their blessings for granted. As Paul said, one sows and another waters, but God brings the harvest, so we keep serving even when the result is not yet visible. The pastor's prepared notes were lost from his computer, so he preached straight from his Bible on John 15:16. We did not choose Christ - He chose us, yet never apart from our free will. A believer simply believes; a disciple has a Teacher and is sent to go and bear fruit that lasts. Unlike a single deed, fruit needs time, patience, and love to ripen; bitter fruit gets spit out, but good fruit remains and draws others to Christ.

A Gift, Packaged Differently

A Gift, Packaged Differently

The service opened with 2 Peter 1, where Scripture is a lamp shining in a dark place. The first preacher turned to John 9 and the man born blind. Jesus' disciples assumed someone had sinned, echoing Job's friends (Job 8:20), but the Lord answered that the man was born blind so that the works of God could be revealed in him. Pointing to the blind tenor Andrea Bocelli and to Nick Vujicic, born without arms or legs, the preacher said God uses people whatever their 'packaging' and turns our weakness into his strength. He shared how he once left university for army service as a step of faith, and there led others to Christ. Visiting missionaries Yurek and Rita, originally from Poland and now serving in Brazil, spoke on our identity in Christ and the free gift of righteousness, peace, and joy that no money can buy (Isaiah 55). Yurek told of tasting the kingdom of God at age ten, and Rita of being an empty cathedral organist who finally found assurance of salvation while reading John 10. From Deuteronomy 28 the missionaries warned that we lose God's blessing when we stop thanking him in times of plenty. They told of 102-year-old Ema, who was given 27 more years of life after she learned to give thanks to God in everything, and of fruitful mission work among Polish settlers in Brazil and elderly Jews in Argentina.

Bless the Lord and Forget Not His Benefits

Bless the Lord and Forget Not His Benefits

Opening with the prophet Hosea (sow righteousness, for it is time to seek the Lord), the preacher calls the church at the start of a new week to turn back to God. The heart of the message is Psalm 103, where David commands his own soul to bless the Lord and never forget a single one of His benefits. He walks through the blessings David lists: God forgives all our sins, heals all our diseases, redeems our life from the grave, crowns us with mercy and loving-kindness, satisfies us with good things (and above all with the living word that feeds the soul), and renews our strength like the eagle's. Because the Lord Himself executes justice for the oppressed, we never need to avenge ourselves but can place every wrong into His righteous hands. Drawing on testimony - the weeping woman who washed Jesus' feet, his own tears under the word as a young man, and his wife's conversion in Moscow - the preacher warns against the tragedy of Israel, who grew full and forgot God. Since every promise of God is Yes in Christ, the church is called to remember, give thanks, and bless His holy name.

What Gift Will You Bring to Jesus?

What Gift Will You Bring to Jesus?

This New Year's Eve gathering before 2025 was set apart as a day of thanksgiving and testimony. The church looked back over the year to thank God for His mercy and protection, recalled what He had taught them, and prepared to step into the new year with deeper devotion and more room for His Spirit to work. The central teaching came from Matthew 2 and Matthew 21:43. The wise men brought gold, frankincense, and myrrh - the very things God once required for His tabernacle (Exodus 30). Since believers are now the temple of the Holy Spirit (1 Corinthians 3:16), the gift Jesus is looking for is our fruit: gold pictures the fruit of the Spirit grown quietly in the heart, frankincense pictures prayer rising like the evening sacrifice, and myrrh pictures dying to self so that Christ comes alive in us. Throughout the evening members shared testimonies of God's care over the past year - a dream that turned a young man away from Chernobyl and spared his life, jobs and a home provided just in time, and generosity that God returned in full. The service closed with seven reasons to give thanks and a confident hope in the eternal Kingdom and the coming of Christ.

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.

Remember the Lord and Bear Lasting Fruit

Remember the Lord and Bear Lasting Fruit

The service opens with a reminder from Proverbs that the fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom, and that this fear means hating evil, pride, and arrogance. The first message centers on Paul's charge to Timothy: "Remember Jesus Christ, raised from the dead" (2 Timothy 2:8). People are prone to forget - Israel forgot God's miracles again and again and turned to idols, even after deliverances like Gideon's victory with only three hundred men. The preacher walks through the life of Joseph: sold into slavery at seventeen, bound and carried into Egypt, imprisoned for years, yet sustained by the teaching and prayers he received from his father. What carried him through the unknown was remembering God's faithfulness to Abraham, Noah, and his own family. As Psalm 105 describes, his trial lasted only until God's word had proved his purity before heaven, which watches over His children and rejoices when they hold fast to the end. A second message takes up sowing and reaping (Genesis 8:22) in the spirit of Thanksgiving. Through faith God plants the seed of His word in our hearts, and like fruit it grows and is meant to be enjoyed - often by others, not only by us. Drawing on Isaiah 55, the parable of the wheat and tares, and Paul's call to sow generously, the preacher urges the church to give thanks, to let the fruit of the Spirit show in daily life, and to remember that whatever a person sows, that he will also reap.

Remember the Road, Give Thanks, Keep Growing

Remember the Road, Give Thanks, Keep Growing

Preached in the season of Thanksgiving, this message calls the church to gratitude for all of God's provision and for answered prayer. Reading Deuteronomy 8:2 and Psalm 23:6, the preacher urges believers to remember the whole road God has led them on, just as He led Israel forty years through the wilderness, parted the sea, gave water from the rock and sent manna, and to recall the many ways God has worked in each life. He shares personal testimonies: leaving university for the army, where God gave him favor and led a fellow soldier to Christ, and an unexpected repayment of a loan that proved God's faithfulness; and arriving in this country with only four bags and no English, yet seeing God supply every need. But God does not want us stuck in the past. Like the architect who called his next project his favorite, we are meant to keep growing and to know God more. From there he opens up grace (Ephesians 2:8-9, saved by grace through faith) and mercy (God withholding the judgment we deserve, as with David's honest repentance). We need grace even to forgive and to love our enemies, shown by a mother who forgave the drunk driver who killed her daughter and befriended him. Closing with 1 John 1:7-9, he calls the church to confess sin and trust God's cleansing, and a woman testifies to the healing of a tumor after the church prayed.

Give Thanks and Examine Your Harvest

Give Thanks and Examine Your Harvest

On this Thanksgiving and harvest celebration the church is reminded that being in God's house means three things: to pray, to sing joyfully, and to listen carefully to His word. The opening message reads the harvest as a picture of our lives - from Galatians and the example of Isaac, each person reaps what they sow, and now is the time to seek the Lord and honestly weigh how fruitful we are before Him. The whole service overflows with gratitude: for daily bread, while a fourth of the world goes to sleep hungry, and far more for the word of God that gives eternal life. The pastor recalls returning from a mission in Haiti and thanking God even for electric lights and cool air, urging hearts to be filled with thanksgiving for everything. The day also marks the ordination of a new senior pastor. From Acts 20:28 the leaders charge him to watch over himself and the whole flock, to shepherd the Church that Christ bought with His own blood, and to serve people in love rather than to please everyone. A closing word contrasts a life coasting on inertia with the believer's call to be a good soldier of Christ - fighting not against people but for their salvation, and holding up one another's hands as Aaron and Hur held up Moses.

The Peace That Outlasts Every Worry

The Peace That Outlasts Every Worry

The service opened with the wisdom of God from Proverbs 8 and the example of the queen who travelled far just to hear Solomon. How much more blessed are we, the preacher said, who can stand before God and listen to a wisdom far greater than Solomon's. The heart of the message came from Philippians 4:6-7: do not be anxious about anything, but in everything, by prayer and thanksgiving, make your requests known to God. Anxiety works like the thorns that choke the seed (Matthew 13:22) and like a branch cut off from the Vine that withers and bears no fruit (John 15:5). Jesus pointed to the birds and the lilies - the Father already knows what we need. The answer is to cast every care on Him (1 Peter 5:7) and let His peace, which surpasses all understanding, guard our hearts. Paul had to learn to be content in plenty and in want. Jesus Himself left the perfect peace of heaven and bore the cross so our peace with God could be restored, and like the father running to the prodigal, He welcomes back anyone who returns.

God's Good Plans and a Generous Heart

God's Good Plans and a Generous Heart

A visiting brother from Ukraine opened by preaching on God's plan and will for our lives (Jeremiah 29:11). Even in the middle of war and hardship, the Lord's plans are for good - to give hope and a future. Just as Joseph was sold into slavery yet became the means by which God saved a whole family, what looks like loss is something God turns to good. So we are called to value what God has already given, to trust Him, and to wait on Him. Life is found only in the Son (John 3:16; 1 John 5:12), and Jesus stands at the door of the heart and knocks; like Peter beginning to sink, we cry, 'Lord, save me.' The pastor then preached on generous giving, asking, 'Can we rob ourselves - and how much will it cost?' Drawing on Malachi 3:8 and 2 Corinthians 9:7, he was careful to say he was preaching neither tithing nor prosperity, but giving to God sincerely and cheerfully rather than under compulsion. Through testimonies from his own life - first paychecks given to God, a gifted washer and dryer, an invoice marked 'paid in full' - he showed that the blessing of giving returns to the giver. Money is not cursed; the sin is loving and serving it in place of God. The service closed in thanksgiving and prayer - for Ukraine and all who suffer, for protection, and in gratitude that 'if not for You, Lord,' our lives would be entirely different. We give God not only our finances but our time and service (Jesus in Gethsemane: 'Could you not stay with Me one hour?'). Cast your bread upon the waters; what we send ahead to God remains.

Building Right Relationships in the Church

Building Right Relationships in the Church

The service opens with thanksgiving drawn from Isaiah 63:7. The congregation is invited to sit down as a family and remember how much of God's mercy has filled their home, and then to thank Him simply and sincerely for His goodness to the church, to their children, their health, their service, and above all for saving their eternal souls. Bishop Vasyl Radchuk then preaches from 1 John 1:5-7 on building relationships among people and among brothers and sisters in the church. He points to three things that damage those relationships. First, selfishness, which puts my own self at the center and defends only my own interests, the same root that drives nations into conflict; Jesus answered it by saying the one who would be great must become a servant. Second, sin, which never changes God's love for us but does change our standing before Him, breaking the vertical bond with God and therefore the horizontal bond with people. Third, discord, which Christ prayed against when He asked the Father that we would be one. The remedy is to care for others as Christ did, who came not to be served but to serve, to walk in the light so the blood of Jesus keeps cleansing us, and to love one another constantly from a pure heart. He warns that when secondary things become primary, life falls out of balance, and he urges that the knowledge of Christ stay the main goal so every blessing, hidden in Him, can flow into our lives.

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.