Jesus calls us out of our sealed places—and invites the community to help unbind us, heal us, and walk with us into new life.
A man born blind reveals the surprising ways God works through the ordinary mud and water—and how seeing clearly begins with releasing our certainty and growing in trust.
The glory of the Transfiguration prepares disciples for the hard, faithful walk down the mountain into the valley of shadow, cross and tomb.
Christ meets us in the gaps we carry, bringing light into our real fractures and inviting us into the shared work of repair.
What if faithfulness matters more than visibility? An Advent sermon on Joseph, quiet courage, and becoming a church shaped by staying.
How might you keep praying anyway—not for control or proof, but to be formed by God’s enduring love?
Homecoming and Communion call us to remember where God has met us before, so we can keep walking forward in faith, gratitude, and hope.
Baptism marks God’s enduring claim—engraved by mercy, lived with open hands, and calling us to daily choices of grace.
God’s grace does not shrug at what is lost. It searches, finds, and celebrates—calling us to join the joy of heaven in our neighborhoods.
Measured discipleship costs one life—the whole life you already have—and Jesus calls us to hand it over with clear-eyed, faithful resolve.
Salvation is not stored away for heaven alone but lived out in service, meeting real needs, welcoming strangers, and bearing costly love.
Jesus calls us from the edges to the center, naming us beloved before performance, inviting us to rise and live with dignity and holy purpose.
Jesus’ fire disrupts false peace, clears away what suffocates life, and refines us for transformation into a community that bears lasting fruit.
When grace moves through the ordinary, will there still be light in the house—and room in your life—for it to stay?
Prayer begins with shameless honesty. Ask boldly, for God is already at work in your tomorrow, shaping you through mercy, bread, and Holy Spirit.



