In the wilderness, Jesus meets temptation with faithfulness, confronts our hidden appetites, and leads us toward healing and freedom.
The glory of the Transfiguration prepares disciples for the hard, faithful walk down the mountain into the valley of shadow, cross and tomb.
When the world turns hostile, God entrusts light to human hands and calls us to move, endure, and bless.
What if faithfulness matters more than visibility? An Advent sermon on Joseph, quiet courage, and becoming a church shaped by staying.
What happens when honesty meets God’s faithfulness? Hannah’s story shows how God remembers, acts, and renews us even before anything changes.
In a weary world of rumors and shutdowns, Paul’s words call us to stand firm, hold fast, and live hope that endures.
Faithfulness is not stillness but fiercely guarding belonging for all who are cast aside until God’s new light rises.
God’s Word is unchained—still speaking through the noise, still guiding us from memory into movement, still calling us to faithful action.
Homecoming and Communion call us to remember where God has met us before, so we can keep walking forward in faith, gratitude, and hope.
Measured discipleship costs one life—the whole life you already have—and Jesus calls us to hand it over with clear-eyed, faithful resolve.
When grace moves through the ordinary, will there still be light in the house—and room in your life—for it to stay?
Palm Sunday invites us to trust and walk with Jesus—speaking, surrendering, and loving—before we see the ending or understand the full story.
God names us salt and light. Faithfulness means shining boldly, not blending in with the world’s fading wisdom.
The Church is always reforming. God calls us to faithful witness in new ways, even as we honor what formed us.
On WMU Sunday we honor those who fanned our faith’s flame and hear the call to pass on God’s mission. Who nurtured the spark in you?






