Standalone

Love One Another

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Love is at the heart of the Christian faith. Jesus tells us the greatest commandment is to love God with our whole self, and the second is like it: to love our neighbor as ourselves. But it’s very easy to leave love in the abstract.

This morning Doran helps us to see more of the specifics. What does love actually look like, not just as an abstract idea, but as a concrete reality? How does love change your life?

Love One Another (1 John 3:11–24)
Doran Morford

Relationship and Right

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How should Christians disagree? Disagreement is inevitable, especially in gray areas where right and wrong isn’t clear.

Paul gives us a window into two disagreements that early Christians faced: whether it was ok to eat meat, and whether they should still observe a Sabbath.

When we sacrifice our relationships on the altar of our rights or being right, Paul says we get it wrong. How will we relate to one another, and potentially disagree, as we think about our response to the coronavirus?

Relationship and Right (Romans 14:1–9)
Chris Dunaway

The Week After Easter

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The week after Jesus rose from the dead his followers were in disbelief. Some had seen him, but most hadn’t. They were tentative. Afraid. Unsure what to think. Thomas famously insisted, “Unless I see the nail marks in his hands and put my finger where the nails were, and put my hand into his side, I will not believe it.”

“Doubting Thomas” often gets a bad rap, but don’t we often feel the same way? When we have to see something to believe it, what happens when Jesus shows up? Can doubt and belief coexist?

The Week After Easter (John 20:19–31)
Doran Morford

In the Political Sphere Without the Political Spirit

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God calls each of us to practice our faith in a way that promotes righteousness, justice, and mercy in the world—for Christians and non-Christians alike. It is an audacious goal.

Listen as guest preacher Neil Hubacker expands on how we can faithfully join God in such a bold calling.

In the Political Sphere Without the Political Spirit (Romans 8:14–21)
Neil Hubacker

Holy Confusion

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Christians believe in the Holy Trinity—Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. But the Holy Spirit often gets the silent treatment. Whether we don’t understand the Spirit or fear what submitting to the Spirit might look like, we all have objections.

What happens when we acknowledge and face those objections? What happens when we let the Holy Spirit into our lives?

Holy Confusion (Acts 2:1–13)
Doran Morford

Been Poolside Lately?

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In John 5 Jesus asks a blind man a startling question: “Do you want to be healed?”

Still more startling is what Jesus does not ask the man: “What do you believe?”

Is it possible that God operates on his own terms and not ours? Is it possible that Jesus touches whomever he pleases regardless of whether we deem them worthy?

Been Poolside Lately? (John 5:1–15)
Rev. John Houlker

Believing is Seeing

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After Jesus is raised from the dead John gives four quick sketches of some of Jesus’ closest followers. Eventually they all believe that Jesus was raised from the dead, but in very different ways. Yet Jesus meets each of them right where they are. He doesn’t demand that they reach up to him; he reaches down to them. As you listen to the four sketches, which is most like you?

Believing is Seeing (John 20:1–31)
Chris Dunaway

Our Plans vs. God's Plans

Sometimes life doesn't turn out quite like we think it will.  We make plans, we anticipate certain events, and life takes an unexpected turn.  For Bill and Ann Clemmer, life took several dramatic turns.

Hear from Ann, a missionary to the Democratic Republic of Congo, who shares about her life's twists and turns, and how God's plans are always better than our plans.

Our Plans vs. God's Plans (2 Corinthians 4:7–16)
Ann Clemmer