(September 13, 2020) “Reimagining Church: Creating the Gathered Community”

from Acts 2:42-47 and Hebrews 10:19-25

Does God love each of us individually? Absolutely. So when we say something like, “my relationship with God is personal,” that’s not incorrect…however, God’s intention is that our relationship with Him was never meant to be PRIVATE. The catalyst for the fullness of life that Jesus promises is found in connection to the community that is the Body of Christ-the church. Now more than ever, we need to consider our level of connection to those who can encourage and walk with us in our journey with Christ.

w/ Vern Collins

(September 6, 2020) “Reimagining Church: Worship”

from Acts 2:42-47, 1Corinthians 10:14-17, 1 Corinthians 11:23-26

When we examine the worship practices of the early church, we find that there is little difference between the elements of worship used then and the ones we use today…and yet, it seems that the early church was so ignited in their love for Jesus and their commitment to the sharing of the Gospel that we have to wonder where the difference lies…

It is possible that it is not the power of the Holy Spirit, or the power of the Resurrected Jesus that has diminished, but that we might be treating worship like an add-on as opposed to the lifeline for our walk with Christ?

w/ Vern Collins

(August 23, 2020) “Reimagining Church: Jesus”

from Ephesians 1:15-23

What is the foundation upon which you are building your life? What is the foundation upon which the church is to be built?

What if aligning your life and the life of the church under the Lordship of Jesus isn’t about stifling life, but about finding freedom and purpose. Looking at the early church in the disruption it experienced, one of the things that Paul and apostles sought to continue to uphold, was the headship of Christ as the catalyst for life to the full and a church that is flourishing.

w/ Vern Collins

(August 16, 2020) “Reimagining Church: The Scattered Life”

from Acts 11:19-30

In a time of such uncertainty and disruption, many of us find ourselves asking questions around what it means to be the church and what it means to be a part of the church.

The hope we have in the midst of this, however, is that this is not the first time the church has been through seasons of challenge or a time of disruption.

If the church is still meant to thrive, and we are still meant to thrive as a part of it, then there must be something we can learn from those who have gone before us.

For the next 10 weeks we will “Reimagine Church,” by looking back at how the church began.

w/ Vern Collins

(August 9, 2020) “Theology of Play: A Foretaste of the Future”

from Zechariah 8:1-8

While we long for God’s Kingdom to be made real on this earth, why is it that we have such a difficult time living like it is already present among us?

Perhaps we need to shift our understanding of what this Kingdom is meant to look like.

w/ Vern Collins

(May 31, 2020) “Holy Spirit: Pentecost”

from Acts 2:1-12 and 2:42-47

More than simply being the agent that served as the catalyst for the birth of the church, the Holy Spirit is vital to the church continuing to live out God’s mission in the world today.

Perhaps more than ever, we need the invigorating, transforming, inspiring, leading, convicting, restoring power of the Holy Spirit to invade our hearts, and invade the church so that we might be an agent of hope in a hurting world.

w/ Vern Collins and Lory Beth Huffman

(May 17, 2020) “Stronger: Stop Surviving, Start Thriving”

from Galatians 6:2-10

Seasons of struggle naturally cause us to have an inward focus.

How am I going to get through this? Does anyone care what I am going through? How am I going to have what I need?

While this is natural, and while we know that struggle is inherent in life, and is profitable for our faith as Christ followers, God calls us to a focus that is not “self,” but “other.” In shifting our focus, we might just find that we begin to tap into that fullness that Jesus came to make possible.

w/ Laura Byrch and Vern Collins

(May 3, 2020) “Stronger: Remember Who You Are”

from Philippians 3:1-14

While seasons of struggle are challenging for a number of reasons, perhaps the thing that makes them most uncomfortable, most unnerving…the thing that makes us want to be on the other side of those challenges, is that they challenge our understanding of who we are in ways that we are often unprepared for.

What if instead of fearing what is revealed about our identity in those difficult seasons, we saw it as an opportunity to examine that upon which we have built our lives? What if we saw it as an opportunity to consider that the fullness of life can only truly be found in Jesus?

w/ Vern Collins and Jeff McClain