
Faith Baptist Church of Palm Bay
129 episodes — Page 2 of 3

The Sermon that Started the Church

Week 2: Revelation and Jesus’s View of Scripture

Spirit Empowered Living
The central message of the sermon is that Jesus' departure is not abandonment but a necessary step to send the Holy Spirit, the divine Helper, who empowers believers with eternal presence, truth, and transformative power. Drawing from John 14, the passage emphasizes that true love for Christ is demonstrated through obedience to His commandments, a truth rooted in Jesus' own perfect obedience to the Father and confirmed by the Spirit's work throughout Scripture. The Holy Spirit, described as the Spirit of Truth, is not a lesser substitute but the third person of the Trinity, uniquely dwelling in believers—transforming them into conduits of living water, regenerating hearts, and enabling greater works than Jesus performed on earth. This promise is exclusive to those who believe in Christ and keep His word, distinguishing genuine faith from mere profession, and is grounded in the eternal intercession of Christ and the Spirit's ongoing work in creation, conviction, sanctification, and the building of the church.

Finding Strength in the Storm

Pictures Of Powerful Living

Glorious Truths
In John 14, Jesus comforts His disciples amid profound uncertainty and grief, affirming His divine identity as the exclusive revelation of God the Father, declaring that to see Him is to see the Father. He rebukes their incomplete understanding of His deity and calls them to faith not in visions or further revelations, but in His person and works, which fully disclose the Father's nature. Jesus assures them that His departure is necessary for the coming of the Holy Spirit, enabling believers to perform greater works through the Spirit's power, not by human effort. He emphasizes that prayer in His name means aligning with His will and purpose, so that the Father may be glorified, and promises that He Himself will answer such prayers. Ultimately, this passage calls believers to trust in Christ's sufficiency, His eternal presence, and the transformative power of His finished work, even in the midst of suffering and mystery.

A Psalm of David

Faith Rewarded: Canaan Possessed

The Goal of Discipleship Groups

Psalms 40:1-8

Many Religions, One Gospel
In John 14, Jesus prepares His disciples for His departure by affirming His exclusive role as the only way to the Father, declaring, 'I am the way, the truth, and the life,' a claim rooted in divine identity and the necessity of faith in Him alone for salvation. The sermon underscores the gospel's exclusivity, countering cultural notions of religious pluralism by demonstrating from Scripture that no other path, religion, or system can reconcile humanity to God, as Jesus' atoning death and resurrection are the sole means of redemption. Through vivid illustrations—from the blind man healed in John 9 to the self-deceived Laodiceans and the false teachers in Galatia—the message reveals how spiritual blindness, religious pride, and empty religiosity prevent true faith, while genuine discipleship involves repentance, personal surrender, and obedience born of love for Christ. The sermon calls believers to embrace this truth with boldness, recognizing that the gospel is not only the exclusive path to salvation but also a divine weapon capable of dismantling every false ideology and taking every thought captive to Christ, demanding both spiritual discernment and courageous proclamation in a pluralistic age.

Faith Provides Victory Over All Foes

Waiting on Purpose

Deep Dive: God's Omniscience
Week 8: What Does a Life that Consistently Applies the Gospel Look Like (Gospeling)

Psalms 37:20-40

Week 7: Speaking Truth

Discernment is Needed to Protect Faith

Mission: Continued

Deep Dive: God's Omnipresence

Psalms 37:1-18

Troubled Hearts, Settled Truths
In John 14, Jesus comforts His disciples in the midst of profound fear and confusion following His prediction of betrayal and death, commanding them not to let their hearts be troubled and calling them to trust in both God and Himself as the ultimate foundation of faith. He grounds their hope in the reality of His departure not as abandonment, but as a necessary act to prepare a place for them in His Father's house—where He will return to take them to Himself, fulfilling the promise of eternal fellowship. Through vivid imagery drawn from Revelation, the passage reveals heaven as a transcendent realm of divine glory, beauty, and eternal worship, not as a material reward but as the ultimate fulfillment of God's redemptive plan. Jesus asserts His exclusive role as the only way to the Father, declaring, 'I am the way, the truth, and the life,' thereby affirming His deity and the necessity of faith in Him. The sermon emphasizes that this truth is not merely theological knowledge, but a living hope that should shape the believer's present life, encouraging perseverance, evangelism, and mutual encouragement in the face of suffering, as the church awaits Christ's return with confident expectation.

Week 6: What is Sacrificial Service? (Part 2)

Faith Requires Repentance

Deep Dive: God's Sovereignty

The Time of the End

Psalm 30

Trust and Obedience Conquers Jericho and Secrect Sin Hinders Faith

Deep Dive: God's Eternality

Week 5: What is Sacrificial Service?

A New Commandment
The sermon centers on the stark contrast between counterfeit and genuine discipleship, using Judas's betrayal as a sobering warning against superficial faith driven by self-interest, power, or worldly gain. In response, Jesus, following Judas's departure, reveals the true mark of a disciple: love modeled after His own sacrificial, self-giving, and grace-filled example, which is not merely a moral command but a transformative reality rooted in Christ's prior love. This love, defined by truth, holiness, and the willingness to confront sin in humility, is the distinguishing sign of authentic faith, as affirmed throughout John's writings and reinforced by Paul's distinction between godly sorrow that leads to repentance and worldly grief that ends in death. The passage calls believers to examine their hearts, recognizing that true discipleship is not measured by proximity to Christ or emotional zeal, but by a life shaped by divine love that reflects God's glory and seeks the sanctification of His people, even at great personal cost.

Spiritual Warfare

Psalms 25:15-22;26:1-12

The Tragedy of Judas Iscariot
This passage from John 13 reveals the profound depth of Jesus' divine love and sovereign control amid betrayal, as He foretells Judas's treachery with calm certainty, quoting Psalm 41 to underscore the tragedy of intimate betrayal. Though surrounded by disciples who are still unaware, Jesus demonstrates unparalleled humility and grace by serving Judas—even giving him a morsel of bread, a cultural sign of honor and affection—despite knowing his heart was already aligned with Satan. The narrative emphasizes that proximity to Christ, even for years, does not guarantee salvation; Judas's life stands as a sobering warning against false discipleship, where knowledge of Jesus never leads to genuine transformation. Jesus' calm response—'Do it quickly'—reveals His complete authority over the events, fulfilling Scripture and preparing His true followers for the trials ahead. Ultimately, the passage calls believers to examine their own hearts: is our faith rooted in genuine love for Christ, or in self-serving motives that crumble when our expectations are unmet?

The Priorities of Faith

Week 4: How Do We Patiently Know

Deep Dive: God's Immutability

What Comes Next?

Psalms 25:1-14

Week 3: The Centrality of Love

Deep Dive: God's Self-Existence

Memorial of Faith

Genuine Confession

Our Eternal Hope
The central message of this sermon is that believers must live with urgent holiness and godliness in anticipation of the Lord's return, not out of fear of judgment, but as a response to God's patient grace and the hope of a new heaven and earth. Drawing from 2 Peter 3:14–18, the preacher emphasizes that true faith is marked by diligent effort to be found without spot or blemish and at peace, both individually and in community, as our lives are ultimately judged by Christ. The delay of the Lord's return is not slowness but divine patience, intended to bring salvation to the lost and to sanctify believers through perseverance. The sermon calls for spiritual discernment to resist false teachings, especially those that distort Scripture, and urges continual growth in the grace and knowledge of Jesus Christ as the foundation for enduring faith. Ultimately, the believer's life should reflect a disciplined, expectant hope—prepared for Christ's return, not for destruction, but for eternal glory.

Psalm 18 - Part 2

David & Goliath (1 Samuel 17)

Week 2: The Art of Gospel Care

Confidence and Confusion

Faith Sees from God's Perspective
