After a summer of seeking the sacred in ordinary things—from rubber penguins to folding chairs—this sermon celebrates how real transformation begins in the low places, where humility, grace, and deep roots grow.
After a summer of seeking the sacred in ordinary things—from rubber penguins to folding chairs—this sermon celebrates how real transformation begins in the low places, where humility, grace, and deep roots grow.
In a world where time feels fleeting, discover how 17th-century wisdom and the life of Jesus invite us to live awake, forgive freely, and love without delay.
When God calls, you do not have to have all the answers—you just have to go. A youth mission trip to Nashville turned anxiety into courage, strangers into family, and reading time into holy ground.
In a world that demands speed, productivity, and control, grace invites a different rhythm—where time is not a treadmill to master, but a mystery to trust. You are not behind. You are held.
William Wilberforce had wealth, charm, and power—and nearly walked away from it all. But once Jesus got hold of him, his faith grew a spine that helped take down the British slave trade.
Prayer can feel like knocking on a door that will not open. But Jesus teaches that the One on the other side is not a landlord or a gatekeeper—it is a loving Parent whose door swings wide, even before we ask.
In a world of scorekeeping and scarcity, Jesus tells a story of reckless mercy that breaks every rule. Discover what it means to live not by the world’s economy, but by the sacred logic of compassion—and how even your wallet might be a doorway to grace.
They never sought the spotlight, but their quiet faith shaped the early Church. Priscilla and Aquila remind us that true greatness lies not in status or show, but in open doors, gentle truth, and steady love.
From the dust of the road to the scuffs on our hearts, grace clings to every part of the journey when God walks beside us.
Once a violent marauder, Moses the Ethiopian became a man of deep peace … not because he was good, but because he was forgiven. His is a story of a God who sees beyond our past, stays close in our becoming, and calls even the most unlikely ones beloved.