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The Resurrection Changes How We Live Now
Pastor Dell walked through 1 Corinthians 15:12-34 as he looked at how the resurrection is the foundation of Christianity and not just a holiday to be celebrated once a year. Without it, our faith would be completely worthless and we would still be trapped in our sins. Paul's argument in 1 Corinthians 15 shows that if Christ didn't rise from the dead, Christianity crumbles entirely. However, because Jesus did conquer death as the first fruits, our future is completely secure. This truth should transform how we live daily, giving us courage to face challenges, proper priorities for our time, and freedom from the fear of death.
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It's About The Resurrection!
Pastor Santiago continued our series "A Church Worth Becoming" sharing a message from 1 Corinthians 15:1-11. The resurrection of Jesus Christ stands as the cornerstone of Christian faith, not just another doctrine but the foundation upon which everything else rests. Paul addressed the Corinthian church, which was being influenced by Greek philosophy that undermined belief in bodily resurrection. He emphasized that the resurrection must be proclaimed as good news, is anchored in scriptural prophecy and eyewitness testimony, and has the power to transform lives completely. Without the resurrection, our faith becomes meaningless, our preaching useless, and we remain trapped in sin. The resurrection proves that Christ conquered death and paid our debt in full, calling us to live as evangelists who share this victory with others.
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Ordered Worship Over Worship Order
Pastor Dell finished up 1 Corinthians 14 this week. God desires order in worship because He is a God of peace, not confusion. The Corinthian church was passionate but chaotic, teaching us that even good gifts can become harmful without proper structure. Every expression in worship should build up the body of Christ rather than serve as mere self-expression. True spirituality isn't measured by intensity but by alignment with God's truth and obedience to His Word. Biblical submission involves mutual surrender within the body of Christ, with all believers submitting to God's Word as ultimate authority. Parents must actively counter secular influences by prioritizing intentional discipleship at home and ensuring faith takes precedence over worldly values.
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The Key To Body Building (Part 2)
Pastor Dell continued his sermon, "The Key To Body Building" from last week where he was walking us through 1 Corinthians 14:1-25. Worship is designed to strengthen the entire church community, not just provide a personal experience with God. Paul teaches that our communication in worship should bring understanding and unity, using gifts like teaching and words of knowledge to build up others. When we worship with intentionality and engage wholeheartedly, it creates an atmosphere where God's presence becomes evident even to outsiders. True worship is both vertical toward God and missional as a witness to others. We should consider how our worship affects those around us, engaging with humility while inviting others into God's presence.
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The Key To Body Building (Part 1)
Pastor Dell got us back into our series, "A Church Worth Becoming" this morning, sharing from 1 Corinthians 14. We are all spiritual bodybuilders, called to strengthen the body of Christ through proper use of our gifts. True worship extends beyond singing to encompass how we use our time, talents, and treasures for others' benefit. Rather than approaching church with a consumer mentality asking what we can receive, we should focus on what we can contribute. Spiritual gifts like prophecy and tongues are meant for corporate strengthening, not personal promotion. When we shift from self-focus to building up others, we participate in God's work of strengthening His church and often find ourselves blessed in the process.
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The Cross We Resist, The Savior We Need
Pastor Dell shared a special message this Easter as we celebrate Christ's resurrection. Easter reveals the greatest paradox in history: God's ultimate victory came through apparent defeat at the cross. When Jesus told His disciples about His coming suffering and death, Peter resisted with good intentions but wrong understanding. God's kingdom operates on upside-down principles where the first are last, the weak become strong, and victory comes through surrender. The resurrection proves that what appears to be loss can become triumph when viewed through God's eternal plan. This Easter challenges us to examine whether we're following the authentic Jesus of Scripture or a version we've created to match our preferences. The choice is ours: respond with worry and resistance like Peter, or with worship and surrender like the women at the tomb.
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When the King We Desire Differs From the King We Need
Pastor Dell shared from Luke 19:28–44 this Palm Sunday. Palm Sunday reveals a profound tension between the Savior we want and the Savior we need. The crowds enthusiastically praised Jesus, shouting Hosanna and laying down their cloaks, but they wanted a political deliverer who would overthrow Rome and restore their national power. Instead, Jesus came riding on a donkey as a symbol of peace, offering spiritual salvation rather than political revolution. When He didn't meet their expectations, the same crowd that praised Him would soon cry for His crucifixion. This teaches us that accepting Jesus as Savior is easier than accepting Him as Lord, requiring us to surrender our expectations and follow Him on His terms rather than our own.
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What's Love Got To Do With It? (Part 2)
Pastor Dell continued through 1 Corinthians 13 as he shared about the 15 facets of 'Agape' love found in verses 4-7. Agape love is more than emotion - it's the essence of who God is. The early Christians discovered this revolutionary, unconditional love through Jesus Christ that reaches the undeserving and sacrifices for others. First Corinthians 13 reveals that even the most impressive spiritual gifts are worthless without love. The passage outlines 15 characteristics of true love, including patience, kindness, forgiveness, and endurance. This kind of love is impossible in human strength and only comes through the Holy Spirit working in us. While spiritual gifts will cease, love is eternal because God is love.
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What's Love Got To Do With It? (Part 1)
Pastor Dell led us through a familiar passage as we continued our series on 1st Corinthians. Paul's message in First Corinthians 13 reveals a startling truth: without agape love, even our greatest spiritual gifts and sacrifices are worthless. Agape is God's sacrificial, unconditional love - different from romantic, family, or friendship love. This divine love is perfectly demonstrated in John 3:16 and Jesus' ministry to outcasts and sinners. The danger lies in serving without this love, making our efforts like noisy gongs rather than beautiful music. To truly love others with agape love, we must first know and experience God's love personally, not just know about Him intellectually.
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One Body, Many Gifts
Pastor Dell walked through 1 Corinthians 12 as he continued our series, "A Church Worth Becoming". Every believer has been given a spiritual gift by the Holy Spirit for the common good of the church. Using the metaphor of the human body, Paul teaches that each member is essential and interconnected. No gift is superior to another, whether visible or behind-the-scenes. The key is discovering your unique gift and using it faithfully to strengthen the body of Christ. When believers operate in their gifts with love, the church becomes unified and powerful in reaching the world.
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Becoming The Church
Pastor Santiago shared from 1 Corinthians 11:17-34 as he continued our series "A Church Worth Becoming". The Lord's Supper is a profound act of worship that reveals the heart of Christian community. Paul's correction to the Corinthian church addresses how divisions and selfishness were corrupting their communion practices. Wealthy members were excluding the poor, turning what should have been a unifying meal into a source of shame. The gospel breaks down barriers, making all believers equal at the foot of the cross. True communion requires self-examination - not to determine worthiness, but to approach God's table with humility rather than arrogance. When we remember Christ's selfless sacrifice, it should transform how we treat others and demonstrate the unity of His body.
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Worship That Mirrors Heaven
Pastor Dell continued our series, "A Church Worth Becoming" by looking at 1 Corinthians 11:2-16. Paul addresses the Corinthian church about proper worship practices, emphasizing that true worship should reflect God's divine order and authority structure. He establishes that Christ is the head of man, man is the head of woman, and God is the head of Christ, creating a pattern of functional roles without implying differences in worth or value. While specific cultural practices like head coverings may not directly apply today, the underlying principles remain relevant. Paul teaches that in marriage, husbands and wives are equal in essence but have distinct, complementary functions. Our worship should demonstrate humility under Christ's authority and honor God's design for relationships, creating beauty rather than chaos in the church community.
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Freedom For The Glory Of God
Pastor Rob explores Christian freedom through Paul's teaching in 1 Corinthians 10:23-11:1. Many Christians struggle with moral decisions in everyday life, wishing for simple rules about what's allowed. Paul's teaching on eating meat sacrificed to idols reveals a better approach than asking "What am I allowed to do?" Christian freedom is real - we don't need to turn every decision into a moral crisis. However, freedom has limits guided by love and God's glory. The mature question isn't about permission but about what builds up others and honors God. When we shift from demanding our rights to asking what glorifies God, our decisions become thoughtful and missional, reflecting Christ's character to the world.
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Stay Alert, Stay Alive
Pastor Dell looked at 1 Corinthians 10:1-22 as he continued our series, “A Church Worth Becoming”. In our spiritual journey between salvation and heaven, we face a wilderness experience similar to Israel's time in the desert. Despite witnessing incredible miracles, most Israelites fell into rebellion and never reached the Promised Land due to unbelief. Their pattern of sin, disobedience, and unbelief serves as a warning for us today. We cannot coast on past spiritual experiences while ignoring present calls to obedience. God provides escape routes from temptation, but we must flee from idolatry and maintain exclusive devotion to Christ. Staying spiritually alert requires humility, dependence on God's faithfulness, and honest self-examination of our vulnerabilities.
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Building Bridges Not Barriers
Pastor Dell continued our series on 1st Corinthians, "A Church Worth Becoming" as looked at 1 Corinthians 9:1-27. Paul demonstrates a radical approach to Christian living by voluntarily surrendering his legitimate rights as an apostle for the sake of advancing the gospel. Though entitled to financial support and other benefits, he chose to work with his own hands to avoid creating barriers to faith. His example challenges believers to examine what rights, preferences, or entitlements they might need to lay down for others' spiritual benefit. Paul's willingness to become all things to all people shows how love removes obstacles to faith through cultural adaptation without doctrinal compromise. Like an athlete training for competition, Christians must exercise spiritual discipline and self-denial to remain effective for God's mission.
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Freedom Through The Lens of Love
Pastor Dell got back into our series "A Church Worth Becoming" by looking at 1 Corinthians 8:1-13. Christian freedom comes with great responsibility to consider how our choices affect others in the body of Christ. While believers have liberty in many areas, true spiritual maturity is demonstrated not by exercising all our rights, but by choosing love over personal preferences. Knowledge alone can make us prideful, but love builds up the community. The strongest believers are those who willingly lay down their freedoms when it serves others better. Just as Jesus sacrificed His rights for our sake, we are called to examine our lives through the lens of love, asking whether our choices point others toward Christ or create stumbling blocks for those still growing in faith.
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Vision Sunday - Week 3
Pastor Dell concluded our 3-week Vision series, looking at the topics of giving, praying, and fasting found in Matthew 6:1-18. Jesus assumes that giving, prayer, and fasting are natural parts of following Christ, not optional activities. These three disciplines position us to receive God's rewards and develop a deeper relationship with Him. Giving involves our time, talent, and treasure - flowing from a surrendered heart rather than obligation. Prayer is a secret communion with God that transforms our public spiritual life. Fasting means going without food for spiritual purposes, using hunger pangs as reminders to seek God more than physical satisfaction. These practices aren't about earning God's favor but positioning ourselves for transformation that overflows to impact our communities for Christ.
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Vision Sunday - Week 2
Pastor Dell continued through John 4 as he continued our Vision Sunday series. Jesus transforms how we see people by moving us from knowing about Him to truly knowing Him personally. The story of Jesus and the Samaritan woman demonstrates this radical shift in perspective. When the disciples found Jesus speaking with someone they considered an outcast, they were shocked, but Jesus was teaching them to see beyond cultural divisions to the person created in God's image. The woman's life was so transformed that she ran to tell her entire village, and they came streaming out to meet Jesus. This transformation happens through obedience to God's promptings, even in small matters, because spiritual growth requires action, not just knowledge.
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Vision Sunday
Pastor Dell kicked off the new year looking at how we need to continue to be in a transforming relationship with Christ as we seek to impact and guide others. Many people know facts about Jesus but lack genuine intimacy with Him. The story of the woman at the well in John 4 reveals how Jesus offers living water that becomes a fresh bubbling spring within us. This spiritual intimacy goes beyond religious knowledge to experiencing God's transforming presence. Jesus promises that those who worship in spirit and truth will find the abundant life He offers. The key is moving past our focus on physical circumstances to embrace the spiritual reality of a relationship with Christ.
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New Year, New You, Same God
Pastor Rob shared a message from Hebrews as we closed out 2025 with our PJ's and Pancakes Service. As we approach a new year, many of us feel the weight of stress, disappointments, and distractions that have accumulated over time. The book of Hebrews offers powerful guidance for finding a genuine reset that starts with God rather than our own efforts. Like the faithful heroes in Hebrews 11, we don't need to be perfect to follow God - we just need to be willing to trust Him. The key is laying aside the spiritual weight that slows us down and fixing our eyes on Jesus as we run the race of faith with endurance. This isn't about trying harder through willpower, but about trusting Jesus more deeply as He transforms us into new creations.
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When the Carols Sound Too Easy
Pastor Dell shared a message from Luke 2 this Christmas Eve. Christmas carols often paint a sanitized picture of Jesus' birth, but the real story reveals costly obedience and faith amid hardship. Mary and Joseph faced social shame, dangerous travel, and life-threatening circumstances as they welcomed the Savior into a hostile world. God's peace doesn't mean the absence of struggle, but His presence with us through difficulties. Jesus entered the world through humility and vulnerability, showing that God works powerfully through weakness. This Christmas, we can find hope in knowing that Emmanuel - God with us - enters our messy circumstances just as He did theirs.
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When The Answer Arrives
Pastor Dell concluded our Advent series by taking a look at Mary and how she responded to God’s call in Luke 1:39-56. Mary’s response to God's call teaches us how to react when divine answers arrive in our lives. At just 15 or 16 years old, Mary demonstrated that God can use anyone at any age to accomplish His purposes. When the Holy Spirit moves, He responds to faith and obedience - the two rails by which He operates. Mary's song of worship, the Magnificat, shows us that our first response should be praise rather than fear of circumstances. Her obedience didn't begin or end with Jesus' birth; she was already walking faithfully before the angel's visit and continued serving God throughout her life. The arrival of Jesus brought forgiveness for sinners, acceptance for the overlooked, and grace for those who need it most.
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When God Interrupts
Pastor Dell walked through Matthew 1:18-25 as he looked at how God interrupts our plans and calls us to remain obedient to Him. Life rarely follows our carefully planned timeline, but what if these disruptions are actually divine appointments? Joseph's story reveals how God works through unexpected circumstances to accomplish His greater purpose. When an angel told Joseph not to fear taking Mary as his wife, Joseph faced a choice between his reputation and God's calling. His immediate obedience demonstrates that following God's direction, even when it costs us something, positions us to be part of His redemptive story. God often uses our greatest challenges to reveal His character through us, showing others the power of Christ at work in impossible circumstances.
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Prepare The Way
Pastor Santiago looked at Mark 1:1-8 as he continued our Advent series. God's preparation for Christ's coming began in the Garden of Eden, not in Bethlehem. Through centuries of prophecy and promises, God orchestrated the perfect plan for salvation. John the Baptist served as the messenger who prepared hearts through his call to repentance, declaring that Jesus was more powerful than anyone could imagine. The familiar phrase 'peace on earth' is actually conditional - it comes to those with whom God is pleased. This peace isn't based on our perfection but on our relationship with Jesus Christ through repentance and faith.
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Jesus: The End of Every Broken Story
Pastor Dell started our Advent series by looking at the genealogy of Jesus. The genealogy of Jesus in Matthew 1 reveals that God works through ordinary, flawed people to accomplish His redemptive plan. From Abraham to David to Mary, the family tree includes farmers, immigrants, kings, adulterers, and foreigners - all real people with real struggles. Even a curse on Jeconiah's lineage couldn't stop God's perfect plan, as Jesus became the legal son of Joseph while being the biological son of Mary. This Advent season reminds us that our broken stories don't disqualify us from God's grace. Instead, brokenness becomes the soil where God grows redemption, encouraging us to wait with genuine expectation rather than going through religious motions.
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Faithful in Every Season
Pastor Dell finished 1 Corinthians 7 as he continued our series "A Church Worth Becoming". Life brings different seasons - both joyful and challenging - but God has a purpose for where you are right now. Every believer has a unique calling, whether in parenthood, the workplace, or serving others. The key is embracing your own calling rather than comparing it to others or constantly seeking change. Paul emphasizes remaining faithful in the situation where God has placed you, understanding that faithfulness shines brightest during difficult times. Whether married or single, each state offers unique opportunities to serve God, but our relationship with Him must always come first.
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God's Vision For Marriage
Guest speaker, Adam West, looked at God's vision for marriage found in 1 Corinthians 7:1-16, as we continued our series, "A Church Worth Becoming". Paul addresses the Corinthians' confusion about marriage, intimacy, and relationships in a sexually immoral culture. Physical intimacy within marriage is God's gift, not something shameful, and requires mutual care between spouses. Both marriage and singleness are valuable gifts from God, with neither being superior. Jesus taught that marriage should be permanent, reflecting Christ's relationship with the church. In mixed marriages where one spouse is an unbeliever, the Christian should remain committed and be a light to their family. Sin pollutes God's good gifts, and isolation from other believers makes us vulnerable to temptation.
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A Temple Worth Becoming
Pastor Rob took a look at a well-known passage, 1 Corinthians 6:12-20, as he continued our series "A Church Worth Becoming". True freedom in Christ isn't about doing whatever we want, but about being free to glorify God with our lives. The apostle Paul corrected the Corinthians who had twisted grace into a license for sin, reminding them that their bodies belong to Christ. As believers, we are temples of the Holy Spirit, purchased at the ultimate price of Jesus' life. This reality should transform how we live, moving us from asking how far we can go without crossing the line to asking whether our actions bring glory to God. Sexual purity matters because our bodies are joined to Christ, and we cannot separate our spiritual and physical lives. When we live as people who truly belong to God, we reveal His presence to a watching world.
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Different In Dispute
Pastor Dell shared a message from 1 Corinthians 6 on how a mature church handles conflict. Paul addressed the Corinthian church's habit of taking disputes to secular courts instead of resolving conflicts biblically. He outlined Jesus' process from Matthew 18: go directly to the person, bring witnesses if needed, involve the church, and separate if necessary. A mature church handles conflict differently than the world, thinks with an eternal perspective, and lives out the gospel. Because believers are washed, sanctified, and justified through Christ, we should prioritize restoration over revenge and show love that proves our faith to the watching world.
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Courage To Clean The House
Pastor Dell took a look at 1 Corinthians 5 as he continued our series, "A Church Worth Becoming". Churches must have the courage to address sin within their congregations, just as Jewish families removed all leaven before Passover. When we tolerate unrepentant sin, we compromise our witness and wonder why our churches lack power. Biblical love includes confrontation when necessary - grace without truth is merely sentimental. Paul's instructions in 1 Corinthians 5 show that church discipline is restorative, not punitive, aimed at redemption and protecting the congregation's holiness. True spiritual maturity holds both love and discipline simultaneously, following the biblical pattern of private confrontation before involving the broader church community.
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Becoming More By Becoming Less
Pastor Dell continued our series on 1st Corinthians this morning, looking at 1 Corinthians 4. True spiritual maturity isn't measured by status or success, but by faithful stewardship of what God has entrusted to us. Paul reminds us that as believers, we're managers of God's gifts, not owners, and our primary requirement is faithfulness rather than fame. Living for God's approval instead of people's applause requires humility and recognizing that God's kingdom operates on different principles than the world. The goal isn't just personal growth, but spiritual multiplication - becoming the kind of person others can imitate to grow closer to Jesus. This means being willing to receive correction, walking alongside others in their spiritual journey, and faithfully stewarding whatever God has given us in our specific circumstances.
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Allow No Divisions Among Us!
Pastor Santiago looked at 1 Corinthians 3:1-23 as he continued our series, "A Church Worth Becoming". The church worth becoming is one that prioritizes service over status, builds exclusively on Christ, and focuses on Him rather than ourselves. Paul addressed the Corinthian church's immaturity, evidenced by their divisions and celebrity-pastor mentality. True spiritual maturity recognizes church leaders as servants, not celebrities. Paul warns that our work for the church must be built on the foundation of Christ alone and will eventually be tested by fire. A mature church redirects all glory to Jesus, stands unified against Satan's attempts to divide, and impacts communities by building bridges to people who need Christ.
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The Power and Wisdom of the Cross
Pastor Dell continued our series through 1st Corinthians this morning, looking at 1st Corinthians 1:18-2:16. The message of the cross seems foolish to the world but contains God's power and wisdom. In God's upside-down kingdom, the weak become strong, and the last become first. God deliberately chooses ordinary, imperfect people to display His power so that all glory goes to Him. The Holy Spirit empowers believers, just as Paul relied on spiritual power rather than eloquent words. By embracing our weaknesses, focusing on Christ crucified, and relying on the Spirit's guidance, we can experience God's transformative power in our lives.
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Called By Grace
God forms something beautiful from broken people through obedience and holiness, despite the church's inherent messiness. The church is designed as a diverse mosaic where different individuals come together to display God's glory. Biblical holiness means being set apart for God's purposes while engaging with the world but remaining distinct from it. Our identity is defined by God's calling, not our achievements, and His grace sustains us through our weaknesses. Unity in Christ, despite our differences, serves as a powerful witness to the world. The power of sharing the gospel lies in the message itself, not in our eloquence.
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Our Response Matters
In times of tragedy and violence, Christians are called to respond from a perspective of Christ's ultimate victory, not from fear or anger. We must exercise Spirit-led discernment, knowing when to speak boldly, when to endure quietly, and when to take action. By remaining steadfast and immovable in our faith, we can navigate difficult circumstances with wisdom and peace. Our responses to adversity reveal what's truly in our hearts, and as believers, we're called to focus on eternal truths rather than temporary troubles, demonstrating to the world that our hope is anchored in Jesus' triumph over sin and death.
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Living For God
As believers, we are entrusted with the gospel and called to lay aside all sin that hinders our relationship with God. We must cultivate a hunger for God's Word, craving it like newborn infants desire milk, which leads to spiritual growth. Built upon Christ the cornerstone, we form a spiritual house as living stones aligned with Him. Our identity in Christ—as a chosen race, royal priesthood, holy nation, and God's own possession—exists for one purpose: to proclaim His excellencies to those still in darkness. We are living testimonies, called not to form a 'holy huddle' but to rescue others by sharing the good news.
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Entrusted With The Next Generation
Pastor Rob continued our Entrusted series by looking at how we are entrusted with the next generation. God has entrusted us with the responsibility of passing down faith to the next generation, much like a critical baton handoff in a relay race. This begins with our own commitment to listening to God's Word, as we cannot give what we don't possess. We must intentionally speak truth about God's character and works while ensuring our actions align with our words. The ultimate goal isn't raising merely successful or moral children, but disciples who place their confidence in God, remember His faithfulness, and follow His commands. Whether as parents, mentors, or church members, we all play vital roles in this spiritual relay race.
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Stewarding Our Talents, Time and Treasure
Pastor Dell started our new series, Entrusted, this week. God has entrusted us with everything we have - our treasure, talents, and time - making us stewards rather than owners. The parable of the talents teaches that we're expected to use what we've been given wisely. Our treasure should be given generously, not just when convenient or comfortable. Our talents are gifts meant to serve others and multiply kingdom impact. Time, our most valuable resource, should be spent intentionally on eternal priorities rather than wasted on distractions. As faithful stewards, we're called to reflect God's generosity in how we manage all three resources.
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Psalms of Ascent
Pastor Dell concluded our series, "The Prayers Of The Psalms" by walking us through the Psalms of Ascent. The spiritual journey of a believer resembles a pilgrimage, beginning in life's valleys where God meets us in our distress. The Psalms of Ascent (Psalms 120-134) illustrate this journey, starting with hardship, progressing through walking with God, and culminating in joyful worship. Our pilgrimage begins with honesty about our struggles, continues through daily dependence on God rather than self-reliance, and finds fulfillment in experiencing God's presence. While heaven is our ultimate destination, we're invited to experience the joy of God's presence now, living as citizens of heaven while journeying toward our eternal home.
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Penitential Psalms
Guest speaker Jason West joined us for worship this morning, sharing on Psalm 51. Psalm 51 reveals David's profound repentance after his sins with Bathsheba. Rather than focusing on religious rituals, David understood that God desires a broken and contrite heart. Despite committing adultery, deception, and murder, David ran toward God instead of away from Him, acknowledging his complete dependence on divine mercy. This psalm teaches us that God responds to genuine brokenness with cleansing, joy, forgiveness, and renewal. When we truly experience God's forgiveness, we naturally want to share it with others, not from obligation but from gratitude.
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Royal Psalms
Pastor Rob continued our series by looking at the Royal Psalms as he walked us through Psalm 22. Psalm 22 begins with a cry of abandonment and ends with a declaration of praise, showing us that bringing our raw emotions to God is an act of faith, not faithlessness. The psalm prophetically describes Christ's crucifixion with remarkable detail centuries before crucifixion was invented. When Jesus quoted its opening line on the cross, He wasn't expressing doubt but identifying with human suffering while fulfilling Scripture. The dramatic shift from despair to hope midway through the psalm mirrors our own spiritual journeys, reminding us that even in our deepest suffering, God is present and working toward redemption. By memorizing Scripture, we store up God's promises as anchors for times of trouble.
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Psalms of Thanksgiving
Pastor Dell continued our series through the Psalms by looking at Psalm 34 as he shared a message on the Psalms of Thanksgiving. Finding joy through gratitude transforms our perspective and deepens our relationship with God, as Psalm 34 powerfully illustrates. David wrote this psalm after a humbling experience where God delivered him from danger, teaching that true thanksgiving flows from a heart that has encountered God's goodness. Biblical gratitude isn't circumstantial but covenantal—anchored in who God is, not just what He does. As we cultivate habits of daily praise, experience God's goodness firsthand, and share our testimonies with others, we develop a heart of thanksgiving that sustains us even through suffering. God draws especially close to the brokenhearted, delivering the righteous from all afflictions.
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Imprecatory Psalms
Pastor Dell continued our series through the Psalms by looking at the Imprecatory Psalms. Imprecatory psalms are biblical prayers that cry out to God for justice against evil and wickedness. Psalm 137, written during the Babylonian exile, exemplifies this type of prayer with its raw expression of grief and desire for divine intervention. While these psalms contain harsh language about enemies, they're not about personal revenge but rather faith in God's ultimate justice. For Christians today, imprecatory psalms help us recognize evil, express faith in God's justice, and provide a framework for honest prayer. They remind us to bring our raw emotions to God while trusting His perfect timing and remembering that our true battle is spiritual.
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Psalms of Worship
As we continue our series on the Psalms, Pastor Santiago shared a message from Psalm 115. God alone deserves our worship because He is the authentic, living God with real attributes that false idols lack. Unlike lifeless idols, our God speaks, sees, hears, and acts powerfully on our behalf. When we worship Him, we gradually transform to reflect His character—becoming more compassionate, loving, just, and holy. Anything that comes between us and God becomes an idol, potentially drawing us away from true worship. As believers, we're called to trust God completely, praise Him continually, and develop a mindset of worship that extends beyond Sunday mornings into every moment of our lives.
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Psalms of Wisdom
Pastor Dell kicked off our series on the Psalms by looking at Psalm 1. Psalm 1 presents a clear contrast between the path of wisdom and the path of wickedness. Those who choose wisdom avoid the progressive drift into sin—walking with the wicked, standing with sinners, and sitting with scoffers. Instead, they delight in God's Word through a journey from duty to discipline to genuine delight. Like trees planted by streams, they become firmly rooted, continuously nourished, and fruitful even in difficult seasons. This wisdom path requires guarding against cultural redefinitions of good and evil while maintaining a prayer life fueled by Scripture.
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Why We Pray
Pastor Rob shared a message on prayer with us during our family worship service this morning. Prayer is more than a checklist or performance—it's an intimate communion with God. Psalm 46 reveals that prayer connects us to God's protection as our refuge and strength, even amid life's uncertainties. It helps us tap into His incredible power, the same power that holds the universe together. Prayer also creates space to experience God's presence when we be still and know Him. By incorporating simple prayer practices into our daily rhythm, we can transform our relationship with God from obligation to communion.
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Have A Seat
Pastor George Moore from Legacy Reentry Foundation was back to bring us a timely message from Job. In a world of quick fixes, the most powerful ministry can be our simple presence with those who suffer. Job's friends, before their poor counsel, demonstrated three valuable practices: they intentionally made time to be with Job, they empathized by entering into his grief, and they sat in silence for seven days. Silent presence creates space for God to speak, acknowledges human wisdom's limits, and communicates unconditional love. This approach is especially valuable for supporting those with mental health challenges, where our presence often speaks louder than our solutions.
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Father's Day
This Father's Day, we welcomed four men from our congregation to share on different phases of fatherhood: caregiver (birth to age 5), cop (ages 6-11), coach (ages 12-18), and consultant (age 19+). In the caregiver phase, fathers provide for basic needs and first experiences, reflecting God's provision. As cops, they establish boundaries and shape hearts through loving discipline. The coach phase involves offering guidance from the sidelines while allowing children to learn through experience. Finally, as consultants to adult children, fathers offer wisdom by invitation only, maintaining influence through prayer and godly counsel. Throughout all phases, effective fatherhood balances correction with connection and depends on God's wisdom. Pastor Dell closed the service by calling all of the fathers in the congregation up to pray over them.
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Where God Meets Us: The End And The Beginning
Pastor Dell concluded our Grieving with God series, looking at Lamentations 5 this morning. When we reach the end of our strength, we discover God has been there all along. Lamentations 5 shows a devastated people offering an honest prayer of grief, acknowledging their sin, and affirming God's eternal sovereignty despite their circumstances. Their primary request isn't for better conditions but for restoration to God Himself. This teaches us that in our darkest moments, we must acknowledge our pain, remember God's sovereignty, seek relationship with Him above all else, nourish our faith daily, and look beyond our current suffering to the hope that awaits.
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When Things Grow Dim: Discovering Worth In The Ashes
Pastor Dell continued our series, Grieving With God, by looking at how God begins the process of cleansing us in our grieving process. Grief can reduce our lives to ashes, affecting us physically through tears and spiritually by stripping away joy. Lamentations 4 portrays Jerusalem's devastation as precious things becoming worthless, mirroring our experience of loss. In our brokenness, God works as a potter with clay, creating something beautiful if we remain pliable rather than hardened. When grief leads to collapse, we still control our response - choosing surrender over destructive emotions. Through this painful cleansing process, God refines us, bringing hidden things to the surface and ultimately working to transform our suffering into beauty.
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