Becoming Like Christ / Becoming episode artwork

EPISODE · Feb 9, 2026 · 27 MIN

Becoming Like Christ / Becoming

from PCFC Sermons · host Parma Christian Fellowship Church

Weekend Service for February 8Scripture Readings: Colossians 1:28-29The gospel’s aim is presented with clear theological urgency: the Christian life is a process of becoming—becoming more like Christ in character, purpose, and destiny. Christ is portrayed as supreme over creation, the visible image of the invisible God, through whom reconciliation and the church’s life are grounded. That reconciling work was accomplished by Christ’s death and now continues as an inward reality: Christ lives in believers, shaping identity and granting assurance of shared glory. Paul’s own story functions as the model for this transformation. Once zealous for the law and hostile to the church, Paul counts his former credentials as rubbish compared with the surpassing worth of knowing Christ; his life after conversion demonstrates relentless forward motion—not claiming completion, but pressing on toward the prize.Becoming like Christ is not automatic or merely nominal. It requires the Spirit’s power, an active response, and sustained discipline—reading Scripture, choosing faithful models, and practicing community that corrects and spurs growth. The sermon contrasts superficial measures of success (size, reputation, programmatic achievement) with the deeper work of spiritual formation. Growth is compared to the slow, nearly imperceptible changes seen in daily photos of a child: significant over time, but invisible moment-to-moment. Thus faithfulness looks like small, consistent steps—surrender, humility, intentional imitation of Christ, and persistence through suffering and setbacks—rather than instant perfection.The ultimate telos remains eternal presence with God: likeness to Christ is both the means and the journey toward that end. Practical application flows naturally: choose whom to follow wisely, inhabit Scripture regularly, enter a community that practices mutual care, and press on even without visible success. The hope offered is not self-improvement but identity re-formed by the resurrected Christ, empowered by his Spirit, and sustained by a community that points continually to Jesus as Lord.[00:00] Welcome[00:27] Series context and aim[00:50] Introducing Colossians[01:34] Church growth vs. formation[02:56] Gospel’s goal: Christlikeness[04:47] Reading Colossians 1:15–29[11:01] Paul’s background and change[15:43] Pressing on toward perfection[22:05] Practical steps: surrender & community[24:54] Invitation and closing prayer

Weekend Service for February 8Scripture Readings: Colossians 1:28-29The gospel’s aim is presented with clear theological urgency: the Christian life is a process of becoming—becoming more like Christ in character, purpose, and destiny. Christ is portrayed as supreme over creation, the visible image of the invisible God, through whom reconciliation and the church’s life are grounded. That reconciling work was accomplished by Christ’s death and now continues as an inward reality: Christ lives in believers, shaping identity and granting assurance of shared glory. Paul’s own story functions as the model for this transformation. Once zealous for the law and hostile to the church, Paul counts his former credentials as rubbish compared with the surpassing worth of knowing Christ; his life after conversion demonstrates relentless forward motion—not claiming completion, but pressing on toward the prize.Becoming like Christ is not automatic or merely nominal. It requires the Spirit’s power, an active response, and sustained discipline—reading Scripture, choosing faithful models, and practicing community that corrects and spurs growth. The sermon contrasts superficial measures of success (size, reputation, programmatic achievement) with the deeper work of spiritual formation. Growth is compared to the slow, nearly imperceptible changes seen in daily photos of a child: significant over time, but invisible moment-to-moment. Thus faithfulness looks like small, consistent steps—surrender, humility, intentional imitation of Christ, and persistence through suffering and setbacks—rather than instant perfection.The ultimate telos remains eternal presence with God: likeness to Christ is both the means and the journey toward that end. Practical application flows naturally: choose whom to follow wisely, inhabit Scripture regularly, enter a community that practices mutual care, and press on even without visible success. The hope offered is not self-improvement but identity re-formed by the resurrected Christ, empowered by his Spirit, and sustained by a community that points continually to Jesus as Lord.[00:00] Welcome[00:27] Series context and aim[00:50] Introducing Colossians[01:34] Church growth vs. formation[02:56] Gospel’s goal: Christlikeness[04:47] Reading Colossians 1:15–29[11:01] Paul’s background and change[15:43] Pressing on toward perfection[22:05] Practical steps: surrender & community[24:54] Invitation and closing prayer

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Becoming Like Christ / Becoming

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This episode was published on February 9, 2026.

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Weekend Service for February 8Scripture Readings: Colossians 1:28-29The gospel’s aim is presented with clear theological urgency: the Christian life is a process of becoming—becoming more like Christ in character, purpose, and destiny. Christ is...

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