
Ekklesia Church at Raleigh
73 episodes — Page 1 of 2
Resurrection Appearances – Part Six – But Some Doubted
Resurrection Appearances – Part Five – Peter
esurrection Appearances – Part Four – Stay in the Room
Resurrection Apperances – Part Three – Mary Magdalene
Resurrection Appearances – Part Two – Too Good to Be True?
Resurrection Appearances – Part One – Burning Hearts and Broken Bread
Stations of the Cross: Part Seven – Good Friday (Stations 13 and 14)
Easter Sunday — 2026 — And Peter

S2026 Ep 13Stations of the Cross: Part Six – The Two Parades (Palm Sunday)
This Sunday is Palm Sunday, the day we celebrate the triumphal entry into Jerusalem. As we walk through the stations of the cross throughout Lent, Palm Sunday poses a challenging question for us. How do we reconcile the hopeful excitement of Palm Sunday with the tragic darkness of Good Friday?

S2026 Ep 12Stations of the Cross: Part Five – The Third Fall
Stations 9 and 10. Jesus fell a third time. And they stripped him of everything. This is what God chose to enter. And it changes what we thought we knew about shame, failure, and what it means to belong.

S2026 Ep 11Stations of the Cross: Part Four – The Cross or the Machine
This week we crossed the halfway point in our series on the stations of the cross, with stations 7 (Jesus falls a second time) and 8 (the women of Jerusalem). When looked at in historical context, each of these stations has a lot to teach us about power, violence, and how we live in the world today.

S2026 Ep 10Stations of the Cross: Part Three – Simon and Veronica
This week in our Lenten series on the Stations of the Cross, we meet two unlikely people on the road to Golgotha — Simon of Cyrene, who was forced to carry the cross, and Veronica, who isn't even in the Bible — and find ourselves in both of them.

S2026 Ep 9Stations of the Cross: Part Two – Jesus Falls, and Jesus Meets His Mother
This Sunday we discuss stations 3 (Jesus Falls) and 4 (Jesus meets his mother) in our Journey through the Stations of the Cross. Neither of these stations is explicitly in the story of Scripture. Does that make them less “real,” or do they have something unique to teach us?

S2026 Ep 8Stations of the Cross: Part One – Condemned and Carrying the Cross
We begin a seven-week journey through the ancient Stations of the Cross. In this opening homily, we stand in Pilate's courtyard, watch a crowd choose the wrong kind of power, and follow Jesus as the cross is first placed upon his shoulders — carrying the weight of more than a wooden beam.

S2026 Ep 7Time – Pace and Presence: Part Seven – With special guest, Dr. Sarah Boberg
The Intentionality of Time: What can a 12-year-old boy in a temple teach us about slowing down? Through the story of Jesus lingering in Jerusalem while his parents rushed toward home, guest speaker Dr. Sarah Boberg invites us to consider how rituals shape us, how children see what adults miss, and how the journey itself—not just the destination—is where faith comes alive.

S2026 Ep 6Time – Pace and Presence: Part Six – Memento Mori
As we wrap up(ish) this series on time, we discuss our perspective on time. How can the more ancient concepts of Kairos Time and Memento Mori help us live in time well now?

S2026 Ep 5Time – Pace and Presence: Part Five – Soul Care
What does soul care actually mean—and why does it so often feel exhausting instead of life-giving? In this homily—pre-recorded because of winter weather, so you won't hear our usual congregational participation—we explore how spiritual practices are not about performing for God, but learning to notice that God is already present in the ordinary life we’re living right now.

S2026 Ep 4Time – Pace and Presence: Part Four – Made for Communion
In this series, we’re learning not to just organize our schedules differently, but to see differently. This Sunday's message—pre-recorded because of winter weather, so you won't hear our usual congregational participation—explores how the universe was made for communion, not competition and consumption. What does it look like when we realign our lives around that principle?

S2026 Ep 3Time – Pace and Presence: Part Three – A Palace in Time (Sabbath)
What happens when a society tries to eliminate rest—and why does that still feel uncomfortably familiar? Through a failed Soviet experiment, Genesis, and Abraham Heschel’s “palace in time,” this message explores Sabbath as a quiet act of resistance against the lie that our worth is measured by productivity.

S2026 Ep 2Time – Pace and Presence: Part Two – Time is Spiritual
In week one we talked about the "Three Mile an Hour" God — the fact that an incarnation-faith has a speed, a pace, a rhythm. And it is not fast or efficient. In week two we turn the lens inward a bit and ask questions about how our culture prioritizes time and what that says about our values. Our time always reflects the stories we believe.

S2026 Ep 1Time – Pace and Presence: Part One – Three Mile an Hour God
What if the greatest threat to our faith right now isn't that we don't know enough—but that we're moving too fast to live what we already know? With insights from a Japanese theologian, an African guide, and two grieving disciples on the road to Emmaus, this message explores what it means to follow a God who moves at the speed of walking — three miles an hour.

S2025 Ep 60Signs of the Season: Part 4 – Gifts
In this fourth-week Advent homily, we reflect on gifts as a sign of hope in the darkness—and how easily that sign gets turned around. With humor, history, and a call to generosity that costs something real, this message invites us to reclaim Christmas as worship, not accumulation.

S2025 Ep 59Signs of the Season: Part 3 – Trees
Few symbols represent modern Christmas more than the Christmas tree. But how does putting a pine tree up in your house connect with the birth of a baby in the arid low hill country of Israel? Is is it just a sign of the ongoing secularization of Christmas? Or is there a deeper, more beautiful story to tell about the Christmas tree?

S2025 Ep 58Signs of the Season: Part 2 – Lights
From the ancient fires that pushed back the winter darkness to Clark Griswold’s over-the-top Christmas lights, we’ve always tried to light the night. This homily explores the deeper Light behind it all — the courage to hope before there’s evidence.

S2025 Ep 57Signs of the Season: Part 1 – Saint Nicholas
This Sunday our Saints series and our new Advent series overlap as we discuss the life and legacy of St. Nicholas, a 4th century bishop that is the inspiration for Santa Claus… but is much more interesting and compelling!

S2025 Ep 56Saints: Part Seven – Julian of Norwich
In a world drowning in plague and fear, a 14th-century woman sealed in a tiny room dared to say, "All shall be well." This week, when fear felt close to home, Julian of Norwich reminds us that love—not power, not empire—gets the last word.

S2025 Ep 55Saints: Part Six – St. Francis
Saint Francis is one of the most popular saints in Christian history. One way to view him is as a holy fool. Someone who shows the absurdity of the world‘s values by simply living something different. What can his life—with an assist from Ted Lasso—teach us how to live out our faith today?

S2025 Ep 54Saints: Part Five – Saint Patrick and the God who was Already There
Between heaven and earth there are places — and people — where the veil grows thin. In this reflection on Saint Patrick, we're invited to notice God’s presence in unexpected places: our pain, our forgiveness, and the wonder of ordinary life.

S2025 Ep 53Saints: Part Four – Moses the Black
Saint Moses the Black was a 4th century monk in the desert of Egypt. He was known for his humility, nonviolence, and wisdom. His story is one of the most interesting and dramatic we will tell during the Saints series. Beginning life as a violent criminal, he becomes a model of nonviolence and forgiveness.

S2025 Ep 52Saints: Part Three – Anthony
God used Saint Anthony powerfully despite his flawed theology - but could the real heresy be not our imperfect understanding of God, but our desire to rule?

S2025 Ep 51Saints: Part Two – Athenasius
Athanasius, a fourth century intellectual and Bishop of Alexandria, earned one of the greatest nicknames in the ancient world: Athanasius Contra Mundum - Athanasius Against the World. In a life that saw him spend 17 years in 5 different exiles, he fought for the divinity of Christ and the intellectual integrity of the church in a time when everything was complex, contested, and even emperors stood against him.

S2025 Ep 50Financial Update - Fall 2025
In this financial update, we celebrate positive giving trends and invite continued growth in stewardship to support our expanding ministries—including community partnerships and kids & youth programs. We also announce exciting news about an upcoming kitchen renovation that will enhance our hospitality and enable us to better serve our East Raleigh neighbors.

S2025 Ep 49Saints: Part One – Perpetua and Felicity
Carthage, North Africa, 203 CE. Two young mothers face an impossible choice: deny Christ and live, or confess Christ and die. How might their story challenge what we think we know about persecution, faithfulness, and the breadth of God's welcome?

S2025 Ep 40Apostles' Creed: Part 13 - The Resurrection of the Body and the Life Everlasting
As we conclude our Apostles' Creed series, we discuss some often overlooked, but incredibly important ideas. Namely, about resurrection and our eternal hope. How can current events, scripture, and some stories about baseball fandom teach us about both our future and present?

S2025 Ep 39Apostles' Creed: Part 12 - Escalating Forgiveness
What if forgiveness isn't something we earn, but something we live from? This message explores why "the forgiveness of sins" was one of the last lines added to the Apostles' Creed and what it means to choose escalating forgiveness in a world stuck on escalating revenge.

S2025 Ep 38Apostles’ Creed: Part 11 – The holy catholic Church, the Communion of Saints
This Sunday we talk about two complicated lines from the creed … for protestants at least. What does it mean that the church is catholic (with a lowercase C)? And what does it mean that we believe in the communion of saints. Are these discussions about special things and people elsewhere? Or are they discussions about us right here and now?

S2025 Ep 37Apostles' Creed: Part 10 – When the Air Grows Still
“I believe in the Holy Spirit.” But if the Spirit is like the wind, what do we do when the air grows still? This message explores Pentecost, Babel, and the Spirit’s work to disrupt, restore, and draw us into reconciliation.

S2025 Ep 36Apostles' Creed: Part 9 - He Will Judge the Living and the Dead
This Sunday we discussed the final line in the Jesus section of the apostles creed. “He will come to judge the living and the dead.” Judgment is a fraught topic in our culture. How can we reframe it to see God‘s judgment as a joy and comfort rather than a burden?

S2025 Ep 35Apostles' Creed: Part 8 - The Ascension - More, not Less
When Luke tells the story of Jesus’ ascension, it carries the echoes of Elijah taken up into the heavens. The parallel is no accident. What does Luke want his readers — and us — to understand about Jesus' ascension? What difference does it make?

S2025 Ep 34Loaves and Fishes - 5th Sunday Campus Partner Spotlight
From corporate boardrooms to nonprofit leadership, India Williams shares her journey to becoming Executive Director of Loaves & Fishes Ministry, one of our campus partners. Learn how this local organization transforms young lives through holistic development and discover practical ways you can get involved.

S2025 Ep 33Apostles' Creed: Part 7 - The Resurrection
This Sunday we reach the center of the Apostles’ Creed with the line “On the third day he rose again.” The resurrection is the center of the Creed and the center of our faith. What can this line teach us about how we should see the world around us?

S2025 Ep 32 Apostles' Creed: Part 6
In this week’s sermon on the Apostles’ Creed, we explore how the early church viewed Jesus’s crucifixion not as a shameful death or as a divine punishment, but rather as God’s ultimate triumph over the powers of darkness. (And as a bonus, Pastor Greg shares his most embarrassing guilty pleasure.)

S2025 Ep 31Apostles' Creed: Part 5
This Sunday we discuss the lines from the creed, "born of the Virgin Mary, suffered under Pontius Pilate." These lines do something very important: ground our faith in the real world of time and space, flesh and blood.

S2025 Ep 30Apostles' Creed: Part 4 (The Holy Spirit)
This week in our series on the Apostles' Creed, our guest preacher Dr. Jennifer Bashaw (Associate Professor of New Testament and Christian Ministry at Campbell University Divinity School) speaks about how the bible defines the Holy Spirit and how that connects to the Apostles' Creed.

S2025 Ep 29Apostles’ Creed: Part 3 (I believe in Jesus Christ)
This week we begin discussing the Son/Jesus section of the Apostles’ Creed. It is the longest section in the creed and full of interesting and complex elements. But today we will talk about the foundation this first line lays for us: That our faith is real, relational, and revolutionary.

S2025 Ep 28Apostles' Creed: Part 2
What does it mean to call God the “creator of heaven and earth” — and why does it matter today? In this sermon, we explore how this ancient line of the Apostles’ Creed invites us to see God not as a distant builder, but as a poet crafting beauty and meaning into every part of creation. Discover how moments of joy, awe, and community can reveal heaven meeting earth in our everyday lives.

S2025 Ep 27Apostles' Creed: Part 1
This Sunday we begin a new series on the Apostles’ Creed, as we take a look at some background and discuss the first line, “I believe in God, the Father almighty.” In the modern world this can be a difficult line for some, but seen through an historical lens, it is both surprising and comforting.

S2025 Ep 26The Ten Commandments - Part 10: You Shall Not Covet
This Sunday, we're joined by Franklin Morales from the Episcopal Diocese for a special interview as he and his family prepare for their transition to Canada. We also wrap up our series on the 10 Commandments with the final commandment: You Shall Not Covet. In a world of mass media and constant advertising, it is difficult to talk about coveting, but in some ways this final commandment might be the most important of all. And it brings us full circle back to the beginning.

S2025 Ep 25The Ten Commandments - Part 9: Truth as a Revolutionary Act
It's not just our mouths that participate in and propagate lies. In a media-saturated age, it's also our ears and eyes - the voices we choose to platform. How do we become people of truth in an age of misinformation and algorithmic bias?

S2025 Ep 24The Ten Commandments - Part 8: Don't Be an Aphron (You Shall Not Steal)
This Sunday we discuss the eighth commandment - You shall not steal. This is an easy one to breeze by, but if we’re willing to ask deeper questions there is a powerful calling in this commandment.