PODCAST · religion
Bloom Co Church
by Bloom Co Church
Bloom Community Church is in Ettalong Beach, Australia. Bloom is led by Steve and Bek Deal with a focus on fiercely loving God with everything within us. We believe everything else flows from that.
-
36
The Kings View Of Scripture
Johnny Harris preached a powerful sermon titled “The King’s View of Scripture,” expounding Matthew 5:17-20. He presented Jesus as the King who did not abolish the Law and the Prophets but fulfilled them completely—obeying them perfectly, teaching their heart intent, and bringing them to their prophetic goal.Using four clear truths (the preeminence, permanence, pertinence, and purpose of God’s law), Johnny showed that the law reveals our need and points us to Christ. He closed with an urgent gospel invitation: acknowledge your shortfall, receive Christ’s perfect righteousness by faith, and let obedience flow from grace rather than striving.A timely and edifying message that lifts up the authority of Scripture and the sufficiency of Jesus, empowered completely by the Holy Spirit.
-
35
To Tithe Or Not To Tithe?
That is not the question. Steve unpacks what he believes New Testament giving is about. It's not about arguing whether tithing is Old Testament or New. It's simply about your heart. Does God have it or not. It doesn't matter if you give a penny or a fortune. A Spirit led life is more important than any arguments on methodology.
-
34
Wednesday Night #4
Ben and Sarah Potter lead a night of worship and reflection around Psalm 23
-
33
The Kings Call To Influence The World
Johnny Harris speaks of The King’s Call To Influence the WorldJesus calls every believer to influence the world as salt and light. In a morally decaying and spiritually dark world, Christians are sent to make a vital difference. This teaching follows the Beatitudes and applies even in the face of persecution. Believers are in the world but not of it—called to remain distinct while engaging society.
-
32
Wednesday Night Church #3
Bek leads a night of reflection on the scriptures and worship
-
31
Wednesday Night Church #2
Bek Deal leads a worship night with some powerful scriptures sprinkled throughout.
-
30
Samaria of Your Heart
Steve speaks about Samaria — and what it means for the places inside us we'd rather go around than through.He opened by asking a simple question: what do you know about Samaria? And then unpacked three New Testament moments where Samaritans show up and consistently outperform the religious insiders — the Good Samaritan who stops when the priest and Levite don't, the one grateful leper who returns when nine don't, and the woman at the well who becomes one of the first evangelists in the Gospels. The pattern across all three: the outsider sees what the insider misses.From there Steve took the congregation back into history — the death of Solomon, the kingdom splitting in 930 BC, Jeroboam's golden calves, the fall of the north to Assyria in 722 BC, and the centuries of contempt that turned Samaria into the place everyone crossed the river to avoid. Heresy, he said, is truth mixed with error — and that was Samaria to a tee.Then he turned it personal. Because there's always a Samaria. Some area we've roped off from God. Some area we quietly worship. Some area we're afraid to surrender because we're scared of what he might ask us to do with it. We take the long way around. We add days to the journey. We do anything rather than walk straight through it.But Jesus didn't go around Samaria. He went straight through. He met a broken woman at a well and rocked her world.And he's standing in your Samaria right now — not to condemn, not to humiliate — just to say: this is still mine. And so are you.
-
29
The War on Your Worship
Steve Deal speaks about The War for Your Worship. The core truth: worship isn't just devotion — it's a formative force. You become like what you behold. Worship an idol and you slowly become less. Worship God and you become more of who you were designed to be.The first distracted worshipper wasn't human. Lucifer's glance at his own glory became a gaze, and a gaze became a throne. He's not just the enemy of worship — he's the first casualty of it. And he doesn't need to make you wicked. He just needs to keep the hurricane going, because you cannot hear a whisper in a hurricane.That hurricane fits in your pocket. Your phone was engineered to hook you. Scientists call the result cognitive atrophy — and what the researchers won't say is this: the capacity for sustained attention is the capacity for worship. Joshua trusted his own intelligence at Ai — Hebrew for ruin — and got routed. Same lesson, every generation.Psalm 46 — Be still and know that I am God — isn't a candle moment. Raphah means stand down. The nations are not God. The algorithm is not God. Your screen is not God. They will all be silenced in his presence. Don't look at the waves. Look directly at Jesus.
-
28
Wednesday Night Church
Bek leads us through a time of worship and waiting on God.
-
27
Easter 2026 - The Charcoal Fire
At sunrise on Easter Sunday, Steve unpacks a Greek word — anthrakia — which means charcoal fire. It appears only twice in the entire New Testament, both times in John's Gospel, both times with Peter standing nearby.The first is the night of Peter's denial. It's cold, there's a charcoal fire burning in the courtyard, and Peter warms his hands at it while he disowns Jesus three times. That smell — charcoal smoke — becomes the smell of his worst moment, the night he became someone he didn't recognise.The second is the resurrection beach scene in John 21. Peter has gone back to fishing, broken and unresolved. At dawn, the risen Jesus appears on the shore — and He has a charcoal fire burning. Same word. Same smell. John chose it deliberately.Jesus doesn't meet Peter with a lecture on failure or a theological discussion about grace. He cooks breakfast. And that smell hits Peter before Jesus says a single word.The sermon's heart is this: Jesus doesn't redeem us by pretending our worst moments didn't happen. He walks back into them with us. The charcoal fire that once smelled like shame now smells like forgiveness — because Jesus lit it that way on purpose.Easter, Steve argues, isn't just an empty tomb. It's a risen Jesus who spent His first free morning going looking for the one who failed Him worst — and cooking him breakfast when He found him.He is risen. And He is here.
-
26
Good Friday - creating God in your image
On Good Friday, Steve spoke about how we create God in our image rather than the other way around. He opened by painting a picture of Judas — likely connected to the Zealots, an armed revolutionary movement — who had spent three years watching Jesus command storms, heal the sick, walk on water, and dismantle the Pharisees with a sentence. When Jesus rode into Jerusalem on Palm Sunday to the crowd's coronation shouts of "Hosanna," Judas believed this was finally the moment. The revolution was coming. The kingdom was here.It wasn't.Instead of rallying the crowds against Rome and taking a throne, Jesus went to the temple and taught about His own death. He washed feet. He prayed in a garden. The Messiah Judas had spent three years constructing in his imagination refused to show up. Steve argued that Judas's betrayal — thirty pieces of silver, the price of a slave — was possibly a desperate attempt to force Jesus's hand. A manufactured crisis to compel Him to finally reveal His power. It was a catastrophic miscalculation. Jesus didn't fight back. He submitted.When Judas saw the verdict — condemned — he was seized with remorse. But critically, he ran to the religious establishment rather than to Jesus. He confessed to the whitewashed tombs who had used him and then discarded him. He went to church instead of to Christ. And he ended his life — three days before the resurrection. Three days from discovering that everything he thought was defeat was actually the hinge point of all human history.Steve noted that tonight — April 3, 2026 — is exactly 1,993 years to the day from the crucifixion. Seven years short of the 2,000th anniversary of the moment everything changed.Steve then turned the mirror on the congregation. Judas, he said, is not a monster. Judas is a mirror. How many of us have built a Jesus shaped around our comfort — one who endorses our lifestyle, blesses our ambitions, never inconveniences our plans? A Jesus who is essentially us, with divine authority to validate whatever we've already decided? And when we encounter the actual Jesus — the one who says take up your cross, who redefines greatness as servitude, who says to find your life you must lose it — how many of us quietly walk away? Not with a kiss. With our absence. Our silence. The slow drift from anything He actually asked.He closed with the vision of Revelation 19 — the rider on the white horse, eyes like flame, robe dipped in blood, King of Kings and Lord of Lords — and pointed out that this King, Jesus at his second coming, was what they were actually expecting the first time. The question of Good Friday is not whether Jesus is the Messiah. The question is whether we are willing to let Him be the Messiah He actually is — rather than the one we would have preferred.Is He Rabbi — as Judas called him around the table - the teacher you learn from at a safe distance?Or Kyrios as the 11 called him — the Lord you actually surrender to?
-
25
The Pike Experiment
The Pike Effect: Steve Deal speaks about an old experiment conducted in the 1950s involving a pike fish. Scientists placed the pike in a tank with minnows, then inserted a glass partition. The pike lunged repeatedly, failed repeatedly, and eventually gave up. When the scientists removed the glass, the minnows swam freely around it — and the pike starved to death surrounded by everything it needed to survive.Using Gideon, Moses and Abraham, Steve posed some questions and challenges to the congregation by asking:What barrier have you accepted as permanent — that God removed long ago?Are you living in response to what is — or in bondage to what was?What if the thing holding you back no longer exists?The central thread running through all three men was this: none of them felt ready. All of them had histories of failure, fear, or inherited defeat. And in every case, God didn't argue with their past or offer self-improvement strategies.He spoke to their future instead.The challenge Steve left the congregation with was direct — God called Gideon a mighty warrior before he'd won a single battle. He's doing the same with you.What would you attempt if you genuinely believed the glass was gone and that God was absolutely with you every step of the way?
-
24
Kingdom Happiness
Johny Harris kicks off a series in "The Sermon on the Mount" with the first instalment - Kingdom Happiness. Johnny declares that Matthew's gospel burns with one blazing purpose, to unveil Jesus the King. Starting in Matthew 5:1-12 The Sermon on the Mount rings out like a royal decree unveiling the breathtaking principles of the Kingdom of God. The Sermon on the Mount is His royal manifesto: the blueprint for life under God’s rule right now.The Kingdom is already here — God’s authority breaking into history wherever people submit to Jesus — yet not yet fully realised. It’s an upside-down society of grace, righteousness, and joy in the Holy Spirit.The eight Beatitudes reveal true Kingdom Happiness: • Poor in spirit (the gateway) • Those who mourn sin and the world’s brokenness • The meek, hungry for righteousness, merciful, pure in heart, peacemakers • The persecuted for Jesus’ sakeEven persecution cannot steal this unshakable joy — it proves we belong to the King.
-
23
Genesis Chapter 12 - part 2
Steve Deal speaks about the story we are all born into — the grand biblical narrative running from Eden to the New Jerusalem. Using Genesis 12 as his launching pad, he argues that God's promise to Abraham only makes sense when you understand everything that preceded it: Lucifer's rebellion, the fall, the corruption of humanity in Genesis 6, the flood, and the scattering of the nations at Babel, where God assigned each nation to a member of his divine council. All those nations went their own way and fell into idol worship — and it was into that context that God called one man, Abram, to be the beginning of something entirely different.Steve shares his belief that Eden, Jerusalem, and the New Jerusalem all occupy the same plot of ground — the place where God has always intended to meet with his people face to face. This is why the enemy concentrated his forces there. The Canaanites filled that sacred ground with child sacrifice and the worship of fallen beings, and the giant clans that had re-emerged after the flood were clustered specifically in that territory — the enemy closing rank around the very place God would one day reclaim. Everything in between — the tabernacle, the temple, the sacrificial system — was a shadow pointing back to the original Eden and forward to the New Jerusalem. The whole Bible, Steve argued, is the story of God recovering what was lost and returning to dwell with his people on that same ground.Steve then traces the thread of "the seed" from Genesis 3:15 — where God promised the serpent that the offspring of the woman would crush his head — all the way through to Abraham and ultimately to Jesus, citing Paul in Galatians 3:16. The virgin birth, the cross, the resurrection — all on that same hill — were the fulfilment of a plan announced in Eden before Adam and Eve had even left the garden.He closes by landing the whole message in the present moment, reminding the congregation that we live between the cross and the New Eden. The cosmic battle has been won, billions of souls are coming into the kingdom, and the invitation is simple — believe, repent, be baptised, and be filled with the Holy Spirit. The promise that began in a garden, he said, has been travelling through six thousand years of history to reach each person in that room.
-
22
Genesis Chapter 12
Steve Deal speaks about the calling of Abram in Genesis 12 — and how the story of one man leaving everything behind in ancient Iraq is really the story of every person who has ever heard God's voice and struggled to follow it. He unpacked the world Abram was living in: Ur of the Chaldeans, one of the most powerful cities on earth, built around the worship of a false god. God didn't call Abram out of desperation or poverty — he called him out of comfort, success, and a life that was working just fine. Sound familiar?The heart of the message was about what happens between the call and the destination. God spoke to Abram while he was still in Ur — but his father Terah stepped in front of that calling and took the family only as far as Haran, a crossroads, where he eventually died. Steve showed how the names themselves tell the story: Terah means wanderer, Haran means crossroads, and Canaan means the humbled place. Many of us, Steve suggested, are sitting in Haran right now — not because we disobeyed God, but because someone else's unfinished story became the walls of our world.The sermon then pointed everything toward Jesus — the one who faced every possible hijack of his calling, from his family, the devil, his closest friends, the crowd, and even his own humanity in Gethsemane — and completed the journey all the way to the humbled place. Where Abram stalled, Jesus didn't. And the invitation was simple: stop striving at the crossroads, let the old man die, and follow the One who already finished the journey on your behalf.
-
21
Genesis chapters 10 & 11
This past Sunday, Steve unpacked Genesis 10–11, focusing on Babel and its lasting ripple effects.At Babel, humanity united in prideful rebellion—building a tower to make a name for themselves and defy God’s command to fill the earth. God confused their language and scattered them, dividing one people into 70 nations (Genesis 10’s Table of Nations).The concept that those nations were assigned to spiritual beings from God’s divine council (Deut. 32:8), many of whom later rebelled and corrupted their oversight (Psalm 82).Babel grew into Babylon—the enduring symbol of human autonomy, pride, and godless world systems that oppose God, running from Genesis to Revelation’s final fall.Yet God’s redemptive plan endures: He claims His own portion and ultimately triumphs through Jesus.
-
20
The Love of God
Johnny Harris speaks on the love of God - How it is indiscriminate, deeply compassionate, it honestly warns, calls everyone to salvation and how the cross of Christ is the greatest expression of that love.
-
19
Genesis Chapters 8 and 9
Steve Deal opens up Genesis 8 and 9 where we arrive at the lowest point in human history — God has hit reset on the entire world remembers Noah. The flood proves what moral progressivism refuses to accept — that human nature cannot be repaired from the outside. Not by a flood, not by politics, not by ideology. God says so Himself in verse 21, using almost identical language to Genesis 6:5. Same diagnosis before and after. The flood changed the geography of the earth. It didn't change the geography of the human heart.
-
18
Seasons of the Soul
Candice Hewitt shares a beautiful and insightful message drawn from Psalm 23, exploring the different seasons we walk through in life under the care of our Good Shepherd. Candice challenges us to recognise the season we're currently in, and walk faithfully in obedience to the Lord.
-
17
Genesis part 8, chapter 7
In Genesis part 8, chapter 7, Steve speaks to God’s invitation into the Ark, God’s timing, His presence, our obedience, hearing the voice of God and much more.
-
16
Genesis part 7 - chapter 6.
Steve unpacks Genesis chapter 6 - There's a lot in this chapter - Nephilim, long life spans, Noah's Ark, the flood, atheism vs design, mortality vs immortality, eternal conscious torment vs annihilationism and trusting Jesus in the floods of life.
-
15
Developing a Spiritual Action Plan
Dr. Ross Mills—a doctor and former Australian Navy veteran—urges believers to build spiritual resilience by preparing a deliberate Spiritual Action Plan for inevitable adversity, just as we create detailed plans for physical emergencies like fires, asthma attacks, or Navy man-overboard drills.
-
14
Forgiveness
Johnny Harris brings a strong testimony on the power of forgiveness and how it changes our lives. This pod starts with Steve addressing the Bondi massacre, our government’s weakness in addressing the root causes, radical islam, and into rising above current affairs by being with Jesus. Around the 19 minute mark, Johnny Harris takes over with a biblical message on forgiveness.
-
13
Experiencing God
This is a different kind of podcast - it’s something you could listen to a bunch of times because it really helps you experience the Lord - the first service for 2026 saw Steve leading us in an experiential morning - taking us into worship, into repentance, quietening ourselves to hear God’s voice, into a time of gratitude, petitioning the Lord for what we need, surrendering our will to his, then commissioning into what God has called us into followed by some words of encouragement. There are a ton of things in here you could use in your own prayer times. Take what you can and toss what you don't want.
-
12
Genesis - part 6
This short Christmas message from Steve highlights that being the light of the world is not a metaphor but a responsibility. It unlocks a hidden prophetic word in the genealogy in Genesis 5 that points to the coming of Yeshua.
-
11
Genesis - Part 5
Steve continues teaching from Genesis. From the very beginning, after Adam and Eve's sin brought death into the world, God introduced the scarlet thread of redemption through blood sacrifice when he killed an innocent animal to cover their sins. It starts in Genesis 3 and weaves through history to the cross where the perfect Lamb of God was slain for our sins. Substitutionary atonement.
-
10
Light and Beauty
Bek Deal explains the light and beauty of Jesus permeating through our lives. The word Yapha (Yah-far) in Hebrew means beauty - used in Song of Songs 1:15 - you are beauty itself - this is Jesus speaking to us individually and as a body, his bride. Yapha means to shine, glow, bloom, be beautiful, or to show forth. To emerge from darkness to project beauty! To burst forth or to radiate.
-
9
8 Promises of Jesus.
Johnny Harris speaks about the 8 promises Jesus made to his disappointed disciples after telling them he would be crucified.
-
8
Genesis part 4
Steve Deal opens up chapter 3 of Genesis which is one of the most important chapters of the entire Bible. Here we look at the fall of man and establish identity for who it was that Eve was talking with and look at the consequences of paradise lost.
-
7
Genesis part 3
Steve Deal opens up chapter 2 with the 6 days of creation and the sabbath, the creation of Adam and Eve and a deep dive into being created in the image of God and what that means for us.
-
6
Genesis Part 2
Genesis 1 - Is it literal or something else? Is scripture authoritative? If we can't trust the beginning of the bible, how can we trust the rest of it? Can we trust what science is telling us? Did Jesus treat Genesis was literal? Join Steve as we unpack some of these questions.
-
5
Wholehearted Discipleship
Johnny Harris unpacks Luke 14:25–35 - Bloom Co’s heartbeat of wholehearted discipleship - where Jesus doesn't mince words. He calls us to love Him first, count the cost, renounce all, and stay salty. 02/11/2025
-
4
Genesis - In the beginning God...
Steve Deal - Without Jesus, we have no correct reference point for understanding ourselves, the world around us, the culture we live in, relationships, marriages, you name it. This series exploring Genesis will give you the right filter to understand why we are here, why the world is the way it is and point to the hope we have in Jesus.
We're indexing this podcast's transcripts for the first time — this can take a minute or two. We'll show results as soon as they're ready.
No matches for "" in this podcast's transcripts.
No topics indexed yet for this podcast.
Loading reviews...
ABOUT THIS SHOW
Bloom Community Church is in Ettalong Beach, Australia. Bloom is led by Steve and Bek Deal with a focus on fiercely loving God with everything within us. We believe everything else flows from that.
HOSTED BY
Bloom Co Church
CATEGORIES
Loading similar podcasts...