Featured Sermon Series’
The Gospel is Bigger than You Think (9 messages)
Supernatural (8 messages)
ALL Sermons
The Great Reversal: The Day of Pentecost
The Great Reversal describes God's work throughout history to counter three major episodes of human rebellion - the Fall, the Flood, and the Tower of Babel. Through the events of Pentecost described in Acts 2, God initiated three key reversals: transforming division into unity by enabling communication across language barriers, replacing human weakness with spiritual power through the gift of the Holy Spirit, and conquering death through Christ's resurrection. This divine plan of restoration invites a response of repentance and baptism, through which believers receive the Holy Spirit and are commissioned to participate in God's ongoing work of reversal in the world.
The God Man: The Cloud Rider
The sermon explores the biblical motif of the "cloud rider," tracing how this divine figure appears throughout scripture as a representation of God's presence and power, particularly in prophetic visions from Ezekiel and Daniel. This imagery becomes especially significant in the New Testament, where Jesus explicitly identifies himself as the prophesied cloud rider, both in his teachings and through his physical ascension into heaven on a cloud as recorded in Acts. The theological implications of this connection demonstrate that Christianity isn't a new religion that began 2,000 years ago, but rather the fulfillment of ancient Hebrew prophecy, with Jesus revealed as the eternal God who had been working throughout history to bring about humanity's redemption.
Holy War and the Secret Savior: Deceiving the Deceiver
Throughout the history of creation, God has been working to establish His kingdom through a carefully concealed plan that would ultimately be revealed through Jesus Christ. This divine strategy required keeping the true nature of salvation hidden from both human and supernatural forces until the perfect moment, ensuring that even God's enemies would play a role in accomplishing His purposes. The profound mystery of this plan demonstrates God's sovereign wisdom in using the opposition of evil forces to bring about their own defeat while securing humanity's redemption.
Loyalty to a Greater King: The Sacred and the Secular
The biblical understanding of sacred and secular space, as illustrated in the Day of Atonement ritual with its two goats, demonstrates that while not everything secular is sinful, sin cannot exist within sacred space and requires both forgiveness and removal. Jesus Christ fulfills both aspects of this ancient ritual through his death and resurrection, offering both atonement for sin through his blood and removal of sin through his body, enabling Christians to truly become sacred space. While Christians live in the secular world, their true citizenship belongs to God's kingdom, requiring them to maintain their sacred character through conscious choices about loyalty and lifestyle, embracing both Christ's forgiveness and his power to remove sin from their lives.
Cosmic Geography: The Gods, the Nations, and Holy Ground
The article explores the biblical concept of cosmic geography, which describes how supernatural beings - including divine administrators called "watchers," rogue spiritual entities, ghosts, and demons - were historically associated with specific geographic territories and nations. It explains how this spiritual landscape was dramatically altered when Jesus claimed "all authority in heaven and on earth," effectively stripping these beings of their legitimate power while establishing that God's authority is tied not to physical land but to His people. This understanding has practical implications for Christians today, teaching that wherever believers gather becomes "holy ground" where Christ's authority reigns supreme, empowering them to confidently engage in spiritual warfare and evangelism while living as citizens of God's kingdom.
Supernatural Rebellion: The Fall of the Watchers
The article examines the biblical "Watchers" - divine beings appointed by God as governors over nations - and their rebellion through key historical episodes, particularly their intermarriage with humans before Noah's flood. Their actions produced the Nephilim and led to increased wickedness that prompted the Great Flood, demonstrating God's supreme authority over all realms. This understanding of supernatural scripture serves to strengthen faith by revealing God's ultimate power and assuring believers that no spiritual forces can separate them from His love.
God and the Divine Creation: God, Gods, and the Divine Council
The ancient biblical understanding of the divine realm included a divine council where God, as the Most High, worked through created spiritual beings (called "gods" or "sons of God") who were given authority to oversee the nations. These divine beings failed in their mission to rule justly and direct nations to worship the Most High God, resulting in their judgment and imprisonment in "gloomy darkness" - but through Christ's redemptive work, believers are now positioned to become part of God's future divine council. This theological framework reveals that the gospel isn't merely about personal salvation but about a cosmic transfer of authority, where those who believe in Christ will eventually judge angels and reign with Him, replacing the fallen divine beings in God's governance structure.
Believing the Bible: Five Tools for Interpretation
The sermon presents five key tools for understanding supernatural elements in Scripture: seeking instruction and encouragement, focusing on original meaning, researching context, deriving practices solely from Scripture, and embracing faith's supernatural nature. While science helps us understand natural truth, supernatural truth requires divine revelation through Scripture since these realities exist beyond natural investigation. The framework emphasizes that biblical supernatural elements are essential for understanding God's character and Christ's mission, culminating in the assurance that while spiritual battles continue, Christ's victory at the cross has already secured the final outcome.