Episodes

Thursday Feb 13, 2020
The Bible Never Said That: Everything Happens For A Reason (1/12/20)
Thursday Feb 13, 2020
Thursday Feb 13, 2020
Episode Scripture: Romans 8:18-28
The Bible Never Said That
Some common phrases in our culture are so well-known that they almost sound like Scripture. Some sound so wise and agreeable that we assume that they’re the Christian thing to say. But God’s wisdom is so much deeper and wider than these tired, predictable clichés.
Join us for a new sermon series where we’ll examine some of the most common misquotes of Scripture, and learn more about what the Bible actually does say.

Thursday Feb 13, 2020

Thursday Feb 13, 2020
Down To Earth: Wonder (12/22/19)
Thursday Feb 13, 2020
Thursday Feb 13, 2020
Down to Earth
The Divine Incarnation
Peace, justice, joy, wonder—these are not just God’s heavenly aspirations for creation; they are God’s enfleshed vision for creation, embodied in a man from Nazareth named Jesus. For two thousand years, Christians have turned to the concept of “Incarnation” (from the Latin word for “in the flesh”) to describe the inexplicable mystery of how Jesus Christ is both fully human and fully divine.
Jesus not only talks about God, or speaks for God; Jesus is God.
God is no longer up there, or out there, but right here, right now.
In Jesus, God’s peace, justice, joy and wonder come to earth, come to life, and walk among us.
If you want to meet Jesus, go to those places in the world where peace, justice, joy and wonder prevail, and you’ll find him there.
If you want to follow Jesus, become like him: embody them in your own flesh, until they prevail in you.

Thursday Feb 13, 2020
Down To Earth: Restoration (12/16/19)
Thursday Feb 13, 2020
Thursday Feb 13, 2020
Episode Scripture: Psalm 80: 1-7, 17-19
Down to Earth
The Divine Incarnation
Peace, justice, joy, wonder—these are not just God’s heavenly aspirations for creation; they are God’s enfleshed vision for creation, embodied in a man from Nazareth named Jesus. For two thousand years, Christians have turned to the concept of “Incarnation” (from the Latin word for “in the flesh”) to describe the inexplicable mystery of how Jesus Christ is both fully human and fully divine.
Jesus not only talks about God, or speaks for God; Jesus is God.
God is no longer up there, or out there, but right here, right now.
In Jesus, God’s peace, justice, joy and wonder come to earth, come to life, and walk among us.
If you want to meet Jesus, go to those places in the world where peace, justice, joy and wonder prevail, and you’ll find him there.
If you want to follow Jesus, become like him: embody them in your own flesh, until they prevail in you.

Thursday Feb 13, 2020
Down To Earth: Joy (12/16/19)
Thursday Feb 13, 2020
Thursday Feb 13, 2020
Episode Scripture: Isaiah 35:1-10
Down to Earth
The Divine Incarnation
Peace, justice, joy, wonder—these are not just God’s heavenly aspirations for creation; they are God’s enfleshed vision for creation, embodied in a man from Nazareth named Jesus. For two thousand years, Christians have turned to the concept of “Incarnation” (from the Latin word for “in the flesh”) to describe the inexplicable mystery of how Jesus Christ is both fully human and fully divine.
Jesus not only talks about God, or speaks for God; Jesus is God.
God is no longer up there, or out there, but right here, right now.
In Jesus, God’s peace, justice, joy and wonder come to earth, come to life, and walk among us.
If you want to meet Jesus, go to those places in the world where peace, justice, joy and wonder prevail, and you’ll find him there.
If you want to follow Jesus, become like him: embody them in your own flesh, until they prevail in you.

Thursday Feb 13, 2020
Down To Earth: Justice (12/08/19)
Thursday Feb 13, 2020
Thursday Feb 13, 2020
Episode Scripture: Isaiah 11:1-10
Down to Earth
The Divine Incarnation
Peace, justice, joy, wonder—these are not just God’s heavenly aspirations for creation; they are God’s enfleshed vision for creation, embodied in a man from Nazareth named Jesus. For two thousand years, Christians have turned to the concept of “Incarnation” (from the Latin word for “in the flesh”) to describe the inexplicable mystery of how Jesus Christ is both fully human and fully divine.
Jesus not only talks about God, or speaks for God; Jesus is God.
God is no longer up there, or out there, but right here, right now.
In Jesus, God’s peace, justice, joy and wonder come to earth, come to life, and walk among us.
If you want to meet Jesus, go to those places in the world where peace, justice, joy and wonder prevail, and you’ll find him there.
If you want to follow Jesus, become like him: embody them in your own flesh, until they prevail in you.

Thursday Feb 13, 2020
Down To Earth: Peace (12/01/19)
Thursday Feb 13, 2020
Thursday Feb 13, 2020
Episode Scripture: Isaiah 2:1-5
Down to Earth
The Divine Incarnation
Peace, justice, joy, wonder—these are not just God’s heavenly aspirations for creation; they are God’s enfleshed vision for creation, embodied in a man from Nazareth named Jesus. For two thousand years, Christians have turned to the concept of “Incarnation” (from the Latin word for “in the flesh”) to describe the inexplicable mystery of how Jesus Christ is both fully human and fully divine.
Jesus not only talks about God, or speaks for God; Jesus is God.
God is no longer up there, or out there, but right here, right now.
In Jesus, God’s peace, justice, joy and wonder come to earth, come to life, and walk among us.
If you want to meet Jesus, go to those places in the world where peace, justice, joy and wonder prevail, and you’ll find him there.
If you want to follow Jesus, become like him: embody them in your own flesh, until they prevail in you.

Tuesday Dec 17, 2019
Be Well: Body (11/24/19)
Tuesday Dec 17, 2019
Tuesday Dec 17, 2019
Scripture Reading: Luke 5: 17-26
One of the great mistakes Christians have made over the centuries is to have assumed that Jesus of Nazareth was principally concerned with matters of right belief or doctrine. For two thousand years, the Church has been preoccupied with the metaphysical and supernatural, to the neglect of the physical and natural. While Jesus was a rabbi who cared deeply about the mind and soul of a person, he was also a healer who cared at least as much about the body of a person. For Jesus, body, mind, and spirit could not be separated. He came to restore the whole person to oneself, to community, and to God.
In this sermon series, we’ll meet the Jesus whom tradition has come to call “The Great Physician.” The “abundant life” Jesus calls us to is a wholeness of life in which our mind, heart, spirit, and body are most fully integrated and alive. To experience abundant life is not to believe the right things, or to have certainty, or to prepare ourselves for the next life; instead, it’s to be well in this life, by the grace we find in Christ and in community.

Tuesday Nov 19, 2019
Be Well: Spirit (11/17/19)
Tuesday Nov 19, 2019
Tuesday Nov 19, 2019
Scripture Reading: Mark 1: 40-45
One of the great mistakes Christians have made over the centuries is to have assumed that Jesus of Nazareth was principally concerned with matters of right belief or doctrine. For two thousand years, the Church has been preoccupied with the metaphysical and supernatural, to the neglect of the physical and natural. While Jesus was a rabbi who cared deeply about the mind and soul of a person, he was also a healer who cared at least as much about the body of a person. For Jesus, body, mind, and spirit could not be separated. He came to restore the whole person to oneself, to community, and to God.
In this sermon series, we’ll meet the Jesus whom tradition has come to call “The Great Physician.” The “abundant life” Jesus calls us to is a wholeness of life in which our mind, heart, spirit, and body are most fully integrated and alive. To experience abundant life is not to believe the right things, or to have certainty, or to prepare ourselves for the next life; instead, it’s to be well in this life, by the grace we find in Christ and in community.

Tuesday Nov 19, 2019
Be Well: Heart (11/10/19)
Tuesday Nov 19, 2019
Tuesday Nov 19, 2019
Scripture Reading:John 5: 1-9
One of the great mistakes Christians have made over the centuries is to have assumed that Jesus of Nazareth was principally concerned with matters of right belief or doctrine. For two thousand years, the Church has been preoccupied with the metaphysical and supernatural, to the neglect of the physical and natural. While Jesus was a rabbi who cared deeply about the mind and soul of a person, he was also a healer who cared at least as much about the body of a person. For Jesus, body, mind, and spirit could not be separated. He came to restore the whole person to oneself, to community, and to God.
In this sermon series, we’ll meet the Jesus whom tradition has come to call “The Great Physician.” The “abundant life” Jesus calls us to is a wholeness of life in which our mind, heart, spirit, and body are most fully integrated and alive. To experience abundant life is not to believe the right things, or to have certainty, or to prepare ourselves for the next life; instead, it’s to be well in this life, by the grace we find in Christ and in community.