You are not your job title, your inbox, or your output. This Labor Day, reclaim the truth: your worth is not earned through exhaustion. It is received through grace.
You are not your job title, your inbox, or your output. This Labor Day, reclaim the truth: your worth is not earned through exhaustion. It is received through grace.
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 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.
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.
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.
You were made in the image of a God who is not distant or solitary, but relationship itself: Father, Son, and Holy Spirit in perfect love. That means you were made for belonging, for beauty, for the joy of giving and receiving love in the everyday moments that matter most.
When the world feels too broken to fix, the gospel does not offer escape . . . it offers presence. It stays in the struggle, sees what others ignore, and speaks freedom where systems have failed.
On Easter morning, Mary Magdalene stands weeping in a garden, lost in grief—until the risen Jesus speaks her name. This is a story of grace that finds us, even when we cannot find our way.
You’re not a self-made somebody—you’re a beloved nobody, saved by grace. This sermon reminds us what Lent is really about.