
Faith Bible Baptist Church
118 episodes — Page 2 of 3

Help Somebody Today
The sermon centers on the biblical mandate of reconciliation and practical charity, rooted in Christ's role as the one mediator between God and humanity, as affirmed in 1 Timothy 2:5 and 2 Corinthians 5:18–19. Drawing from the parable of the Good Samaritan in Luke 10 and the letter to Philemon, it emphasizes that true faith manifests in tangible acts of love—restoring the lost, healing broken relationships, and bearing one another's burdens with humility and compassion. The preacher calls believers to move beyond passive knowledge of Scripture to active, personal investment in others' spiritual and emotional well-being, urging each Christian to identify specific individuals to pray for, restore, and love as Christ has loved them. This ministry of reconciliation is not reserved for pastors or missionaries but is the shared responsibility of every believer, who is empowered by the Holy Spirit to transform lives, heal divisions, and reflect God's heart for the world.

The Obligations Of Love
The sermon presents a comprehensive exploration of love as both a quality and a quantity, rooted in biblical theology and practical application. It emphasizes that true love begins with God, whose perfect love transforms believers into agents of grace, enabling them to love others—especially those they naturally dislike—without fear or favor. The message unfolds through a structured examination of twelve divine obligations to love, ranging from loving God and Christ to loving neighbors, brothers and sisters in Christ, spouses, children, strangers, enemies, and church leaders, all grounded in Scripture and illustrated through personal anecdotes and theological insight. The preacher underscores that love is not optional but a divine imperative, requiring the Holy Spirit's power to overcome natural inclinations and live out Christ's commandments with sacrificial, agape love. Ultimately, the sermon calls the congregation to prioritize God first, allowing His love to shape every relationship and transform the church into a community of radical, Christ-centered compassion.

What Mean Ye By These Stones?
The sermon centers on the biblical narrative of Israel crossing the Jordan River, emphasizing that God's miraculous provision is not an endpoint but the beginning of a spiritual journey marked by obedience, faith, and generational impact. Drawing from Joshua 3 and 4, it highlights the command to set up twelve stones as a living memorial—intended to provoke questions from future generations about God's faithfulness—calling believers to live with visible, tangible evidence of divine work in their lives. The preacher urges a shift from passive religiosity to active spiritual warfare, warning against a 'form of godliness' without power, and challenges individuals—especially fathers and leaders—to cultivate a life of obedience, sacrifice, and spiritual fruit that future generations can point to with awe. Rooted in the New Testament's call to persevere in godliness despite persecution, the message affirms that true discipleship produces enduring testimony, and every believer is invited to carry their own stones—proof of God's faithfulness—into the battles of life.

No Strings Attached!
The sermon centers on the biblical concept of charity—God's selfless, unconditional love—as the ultimate expression of faith, calling believers to actively cultivate it alongside other virtues like virtue, knowledge, temperance, and patience. Rooted in 1 Peter 1:5–8 and amplified by Jesus' teaching in Luke 6:27–35, it emphasizes that true charity is not reciprocal or transactional but a sacrificial, Spirit-led love that extends even to enemies and the unthankful, mirroring God's own grace. The message warns against misusing Christian liberty by neglecting the impact of one's actions on weaker believers, using 1 Corinthians 8 as a model for how knowledge without charity can harm, while charity edifies, covers sins through repentance, and avoids becoming a stumbling block. Ultimately, it calls the church to a life of intentional, Spirit-empowered love—marked by self-denial, accountability, and a longing to leave a lasting, fruitful legacy for future generations.

Be Like David In Your Youth
The sermon centers on the life of David as a model for youth, emphasizing that godly character is formed in early years through faithfulness in small duties, spiritual maturity, musical giftedness, physical strength, and a deep, personal relationship with God. Drawing from 1 Samuel 16 and 17, it highlights how David's obedience in tending sheep, his skill as a harpist, his anointing by the Holy Spirit, his courage in defeating a lion, bear, and Goliath, and his poetic heart all originated in his youth and were rooted in a desire to know God's heart. The preacher calls young people to emulate David's balance—being industrious, spiritually filled, physically disciplined, and creatively devoted—while warning against vanity and worldly distractions. Ultimately, the message is a pastoral exhortation to pursue a life of faithfulness and intimacy with God from an early age, trusting that such devotion leads to lasting impact and divine purpose.

Washing Each Other's Feet
The sermon centers on the profound spiritual principle of mutual reconciliation and humble service, drawn from Jesus' act of washing the disciples' feet in John 13. It emphasizes that while salvation brings a complete, once-for-all cleansing of sin, ongoing fellowship with God and one another requires continual spiritual maintenance—symbolized by the need to wash feet, representing the humility and responsibility to restore broken relationships. The preacher underscores that believers, having been reconciled to God through Christ, are called to embody the ministry of reconciliation by forgiving, bearing one another's burdens, and actively healing divisions, even when they did not cause the harm. Drawing from passages like 1 John 1:9, Galatians 6:1–2, and Luke 15, the message calls the church to reject self-righteousness and cliquishness, embracing instead a posture of grace, vulnerability, and active restoration. Ultimately, true joy and spiritual health are found not in perfection but in the willingness to serve, forgive, and reconcile—reflecting Christ's own sacrificial love and enabling the church to become a living testament to God's redemptive work.

Be Kind We Are Family
The sermon centers on the biblical imperative of brotherly kindness as a vital component of spiritual maturity, rooted in the transformative power of God's grace, divine nature, and the Holy Spirit. Drawing from 2 Peter 1:5–7 and other key passages, it emphasizes that true kindness is not merely polite behavior but a fruit of a consecrated life marked by purity of heart, self-control, patience, and sincere love, all flowing from a deep relationship with God. The preacher underscores that this kindness is demonstrated through honoring others, forgiving one another, and actively pursuing unity, all of which are essential for the church to function as the household of God and a living temple of the Holy Spirit. The result is not only spiritual health and holiness but also a foretaste of the eternal communion with Christ, where love grows ever deeper amid a world marked by coldness and division.

The Quality Of Love
The sermon centers on the progressive maturation of love in the Christian life, emphasizing that true love is not innate but must be cultivated and perfected through divine transformation. It begins with self-love, the natural starting point, and moves through natural affection—love for family and community—before advancing to spiritual love, the command to love God with all one's being, which is both the greatest and most demanding of the commandments. The ultimate goal, however, is perfect love, as revealed in 1 John, where love is perfected through obedience, the indwelling of the Holy Spirit, and the eradication of fear, enabling believers to live boldly in service and witness. The preacher underscores that this perfection is not achieved by human effort alone but by surrendering one's heart to God's direction, praying that the Lord would guide each person into the love of God, which is the foundation of all true Christian living.

Instruction In The Spiritual Side
The sermon centers on the necessity of cultivating a vibrant, personal relationship with the living God, emphasizing that the church is not merely a pillar of truth but a community of active spiritual engagement. Drawing from First Timothy 3:15, it underscores that genuine faith involves more than doctrinal accuracy—it requires humility, spiritual discipline, and intentional surrender to God, illustrated through biblical examples like Elijah's altar and the disciples' failed exorcism. The preacher calls the congregation to move beyond passive attendance, urging them to engage in practices such as prayer, fasting, and heartfelt worship as acts of spiritual sacrifice that draw God near. He warns against a religion reduced to external performance or cultural conformity, stressing that true transformation begins with a humble heart and a willingness to submit to God's work, even when it feels uncomfortable or unfamiliar. Ultimately, the message is a call to pursue intimacy with God, to live out spiritual fruit in daily life, and to recognize that authentic worship and spiritual power are not manufactured but invited through personal consecration and surrender.

My Help & My Deliverer
This sermon centers on the transformative power of encountering God's personal presence through the Holy Spirit, emphasizing that biblical truth alone is insufficient without spiritual renewal and heartfelt worship. Drawing from Psalm 40, it calls believers to move beyond intellectual knowledge to a life of genuine rejoicing, magnifying God's salvation, embracing spiritual need with humility, and advancing in faith to overcome spiritual opposition. The preacher passionately advocates for authentic expressions of love, gratitude, and worship—both privately and corporately—urging the congregation to let the Holy Spirit lead their emotions, relationships, and spiritual priorities. With a tone that is deeply pastoral, convicting, and hopeful, the message challenges the church to be a living, breathing community where God's presence is palpable, relationships are restored, and the gospel is lived out in tangible, Spirit-led ways.

Prayer And Participation Is The Path Forward - conclusion
The sermon centers on a call to renew the church's identity as a house of prayer for all people and all nations, rooted in Scripture from Isaiah, Mark, and John, and reinforced by the urgency of prayer, spiritual responsiveness, and active faith. It emphasizes a transformative vision for the congregation—marked by intentional ministry, revitalized prayer meetings, and a shift toward evangelistic outreach—under the leadership of a new pastor whose zeal and burden for souls require sustained spiritual support. The speaker reflects on decades of faithful service, the challenges of pastoral ministry, and the need for the church to embrace change with courage, prayer, and unity, especially as it prepares to move to a new facility, trusting that God has opened a great and effective door despite opposition. Ultimately, the message calls the congregation to personal and collective spiritual awakening, urging every believer to respond to God's Word with immediacy, to pray fervently for leaders and the lost, and to embody a living, active faith that honors Christ's command to make His house a place of prayer for all.

Prayer And Participation Is The Path Forward
The sermon centers on a call to transform the Sunday morning gathering from a passive class into an active, missional ministry rooted in urgency, prayer, and intentional outreach. Drawing from Ecclesiastes 9:10 and John 9:4, it emphasizes that time is fleeting and every opportunity to serve God must be seized with diligence, as eternity awaits. The speaker urges the congregation to embrace this vision by stepping beyond comfort zones, fostering fellowship during the post-lesson transition, and actively inviting others through creative naming and outreach efforts. A strong emphasis is placed on prayer as the foundation of spiritual revival, citing historical examples and biblical precedents to argue that genuine transformation begins in prayer meetings and personal intercession. The vision extends to the church's upcoming move to North Collins, where the congregation is encouraged to be ready to minister to former parishioners and community members, reflecting a broader mission to be a 'house of prayer for all nations' and to cultivate spiritual vitality through disciplined prayer, unity, and evangelistic courage.

Stop Lying To Yourself! - Part 3
The sermon delivers a powerful call to radical self-honesty, rooted in the biblical truth that the human heart is deceitful and desperately wicked, yet God alone knows and transforms it. Centered on James 1:26 and the parable of the Pharisee and the publican in Luke 18, it exposes the dangers of self-deception—denying sin, blaming others, minimizing its seriousness, rationalizing wrongdoing, delaying obedience, and clinging to a false sense of righteousness through religious performance, comparison, or self-justification. The message emphasizes that true faith is not measured by outward actions or self-righteous pride, but by genuine humility, self-control, and a daily dependence on God's grace. It warns against seeking teachers who cater to itching ears, urging believers to embrace sound doctrine even when it convicts, and to pursue truth not for comfort, but for freedom. Ultimately, the sermon calls the church to a life of continual repentance, surrender, and reliance on Christ, where honesty before God leads to liberation and spiritual victory.

Being Like Jesus
The sermon, drawn from 2 Peter 1:5–7, centers on the imperative of cultivating godliness as a vital component of the Christian life, emphasizing that true faith must be actively developed through the addition of virtues such as moral excellence, knowledge, self-control, and patience, culminating in godliness—being conformed to the image of Christ. Rooted in the biblical doctrines of justification, sanctification, and glorification, the message underscores that godliness is not merely a moral ideal but a transformative process empowered by the Holy Spirit, requiring daily surrender, intentional pursuit, and practical application in thought, word, and deed. The preacher warns against counterfeit piety, highlighting that genuine godliness is marked by prayer, persecution, divine deliverance, and a distinct separation from the world, while also affirming its profound practical benefits—both in this life and the next. Through exhortations to exercise, follow, and live godliness, the sermon calls believers to embrace a disciplined, Christ-centered life, grounded in Scripture, shaped by the Holy Spirit, and sustained by the hope of ultimate glorification when believers will see Christ as He is and be made like Him.

Missionary Roy Sietmann
Preaching Service The sermon centers on the urgent call to spiritual vigilance, drawing from Mark 8:14–21 to warn against the insidious influence of 'leaven'—the hypocrisy of the Pharisees and the self-centered ambition of Herod—that can subtly infiltrate the hearts of believers. Through personal testimony of missionary service in Zacatecas, Mexico, the speaker illustrates how both cultural religion and worldly ambition can distort spiritual focus, even within the church, while emphasizing the need to prioritize eternal souls over earthly concerns. The message calls the congregation to a deeper, more authentic faith marked by selfless service, constant spiritual discernment, and a life dedicated to Christ's glory rather than personal legacy or religious performance. The preacher urges a heartfelt examination of one's own heart, inviting repentance and renewed commitment to see the world through God's eyes, especially in light of ongoing missions work and the spiritual battle for souls. Ultimately, the sermon is a pastoral exhortation to live with open eyes, not blinded by outward appearances or self-promotion, but fixed on the eternal purpose of redeeming lost lives.

Stop Lying To Yourself - Part 2
The sermon centers on the urgent need for self-honesty, rooted in Jeremiah 17:9, which reveals the heart's deceitfulness and deep wickedness, calling believers to confront their sin without self-flattery or despair. It identifies five forms of self-deception—denying sin, blaming others, minimizing sin's seriousness, rationalizing wrongdoing, and delaying obedience—each rooted in pride and obstructing genuine spiritual growth. The message emphasizes that true transformation comes not through human effort or religious performance, but through recognizing one's helplessness and trusting in God's sufficiency, as affirmed in 2 Corinthians 3:5. Drawing on Scripture from James, Galatians, and Matthew, it calls Christians to move beyond being hearers only to doers of the Word, embracing humility, repentance, and practical faith that impacts families, communities, and the lost. Ultimately, the sermon invites a renewed commitment to authenticity, urging the congregation to begin the year with honest self-examination, reliance on God's grace, and a willingness to be transformed by His truth.

Financial Peace - Lesson 7
Preaching Service This final lesson in the Financial Peace course addresses common financial questions with a focus on biblical stewardship, practical wisdom, and long-term financial health. It emphasizes the importance of emergency funds in safe, accessible accounts like money market or high-yield savings accounts, highlighting the value of liquidity and modest interest without sacrificing security. The sermon advocates for 15-year fixed-rate mortgages over 30-year terms, demonstrating through math that the long-term cost of interest is significantly higher with longer loans, and encourages investing the saved monthly payment after payoff to build wealth. It warns against refinancing unless the total cost is lower, cautions against leasing cars due to their high long-term expense and risk, and challenges the cultural obsession with monthly payments by promoting total cost analysis. The teaching concludes with a strong critique of credit scores, arguing they reward debt rather than financial freedom, and urges believers to prioritize biblical principles—debt freedom, prudent planning, and stewardship—over metrics designed to promote borrowing.

How To Ruin 2026 In 8 Ways
The sermon delivers a sobering yet hopeful call to spiritual renewal, using Proverbs as a lens to expose eight destructive patterns that lead to spiritual bankruptcy: laziness, selfishness, reckless spending, refusal to listen, excessive sleep, gluttony, worldly friendships, and an obsessive pursuit of wealth. Centered on the conviction that true prosperity is found not in material abundance but in faithfulness, diligence, and self-denial, the message challenges believers to examine their lives for signs of spiritual complacency and to embrace a proactive, Christ-centered discipline. With a tone that is both urgent and pastoral, the preacher emphasizes that God's faithfulness should inspire greater devotion, not indifference, and urges the congregation to invest in eternal priorities—prayer, Scripture, evangelism, and generosity—so that 2026 becomes a year marked by meaningful service and divine blessing rather than regret and emptiness.

Stop Lying To Yourself
The sermon centers on the urgent call to cease self-deception, rooted in Jeremiah 17:9's declaration that the heart is deceitful above all things, and reinforced by 1 John 1:8–10, which warns against denying personal sinfulness. It emphasizes that true Christian maturity requires daily surrender to God's Word and the Holy Spirit, rejecting the lie of self-sufficiency and the dangerous habit of justifying sin through blame or circumstance. The preacher underscores that genuine spiritual growth comes not from human effort or self-reliance, but from a deep, consistent relationship with Scripture, which exposes hidden sin, fosters humility, and enables authentic repentance. By confronting the heart's deceitfulness and embracing accountability, believers are invited to live not in the flesh but in the Spirit, trusting God's faithfulness to forgive and cleanse, and to walk in truth and holiness.

Loyal To The Text
The sermon calls believers to a deeper, more intentional relationship with God through daily engagement with Scripture, warning against a carnal mindset that relies on external guidance rather than biblical discernment. Drawing from 1 Corinthians 3 and Hebrews 5, it emphasizes that spiritual maturity requires moving beyond 'milk' to 'meat'—deep, consistent study of God's Word to develop the ability to discern truth and apply it personally in life's decisions. The preacher uses the story of Ruth and the cultural customs of Israel to illustrate how God's law was meant to be lived out with wisdom and obedience, not merely observed as tradition, and challenges the congregation to reject cultural conformity in favor of biblical authority. He underscores that every believer, regardless of role or age, is expected to be a teacher of God's oracles, equipped by Scripture to guide family, church, and personal life. Ultimately, the message is a pastoral exhortation to prioritize daily Bible reading—not as a duty, but as a vital means of spiritual growth, accountability, and intimacy with God, with practical tools offered to overcome common barriers like busyness or distraction.

Financial Peace - Lesson 6
This sermon emphasizes the importance of proactive estate planning as an act of stewardship, wisdom, and love for family and future generations. Centered on biblical principles of order and responsibility, it guides listeners through essential tools such as healthcare proxies, wills, and trusts, highlighting how they safeguard loved ones, prevent family conflict, and ensure assets are distributed according to one's wishes. The speaker underscores the financial and emotional burdens of probate, especially in New York State, and explains how strategic use of beneficiaries, joint ownership, and trusts—particularly irrevocable trusts—can bypass probate, minimize tax liabilities through stepped-up cost basis, and protect assets from creditors or Medicaid. With a pastoral tone, the message urges believers to act while in good health, communicate openly with heirs, and prioritize long-term planning over short-term convenience, all rooted in faithful stewardship of God's blessings.

Christmas Candlelight Service
The sermon centers on the profound significance of Christmas as the fulfillment of ancient prophecy, particularly Isaiah 9:6, which reveals Jesus Christ not merely as Saviour but as a divine package of titles—Wonderful Counselor, Mighty God, Everlasting Father, and Prince of Peace. Through a reflective and pastoral tone, the message calls believers beyond mere salvation to a deeper, ongoing relationship with Christ, emphasizing that His name encompasses eternal wisdom, unyielding strength, everlasting presence, and transformative peace. The preacher urges listeners to 'get into Jesus'—to actively engage with His counsel, rely on His power, embrace His fatherly care, and experience His peace amid a world marked by fear and turmoil. Rooted in Scripture and personal testimony, the sermon concludes with a heartfelt invitation to receive Christ as Saviour and to pursue a life of intimate communion with Him, where every aspect of His divine nature becomes a living reality.

Christmas Cantata
The sermon centers on the profound truth that Christmas is not merely a seasonal celebration but the fulfillment of God's eternal plan to redeem humanity through the gift of His Son, Jesus Christ. Drawing from Scripture, including the annunciation to Mary, the shepherds' visit, and the Magi's journey, it emphasizes that Jesus is the promised Messiah—Emmanuel, the Prince of Peace, and the Saviour of the world—whose birth marks the arrival of divine hope, joy, and salvation. The preacher underscores that eternal life is not earned through religious effort but received by faith as a free gift, illustrated through a personal testimony of conversion and a clear invitation to repent and believe. With a pastoral and urgent tone, the message calls listeners to respond personally to Christ's offer of salvation, affirming that God desires all to be saved and has already provided the way through Christ's sacrificial death and resurrection.

Evening Message By Pastor Justin Dye
The sermon centers on the vital importance of preparing one's heart to seek and follow God, using Ezra as a model of spiritual readiness and Rehoboam as a warning of spiritual neglect. Through a contrast of these two figures—Ezra, a priest and scribe who diligently studied Scripture, trusted God's provision, and responded to sin with repentance and action, versus Rehoboam, a king who ignored divine guidance, sought worldly counsel, and allowed idolatry to flourish—the preacher emphasizes that true spiritual maturity involves intentional biblical study, consistent prayer, and a willingness to surrender carnal desires before judgment arrives. The message calls believers to move beyond passive church attendance, to actively steward their time, resources, and relationships in alignment with God's Word, and to cultivate a heart that seeks God first, not as a last resort after failure. Ultimately, the sermon urges a transformation from spiritual complacency to a life of disciplined, proactive faith, where obedience flows from a heart prepared by Scripture, prayer, and surrender.

3 Ways To Worship God
This sermon presents Mary as a model of holistic worship, emphasizing three interconnected ways she glorified God: through her body, soul, and spirit. It underscores that true worship involves consecrating the physical self as a living sacrifice, honoring God's design for modesty, self-control, and purity, as taught in Scripture. Mary's spiritual depth is highlighted by her declaration, 'My soul doth magnify the Lord,' illustrating the importance of nurturing the soul through prayer, Scripture, and a deep, abiding relationship with God. Her joy in God as her Saviour reveals a spirit fully surrendered, where emotions, thoughts, and will are aligned with divine truth, reflecting the biblical call to worship in spirit and truth. Ultimately, the sermon calls believers to pursue wholeness—body, soul, and spirit—sanctified by God's peace, becoming complete in Christ, not perfect, but yielded and transformed.

Mary Had A Little Lamb
The sermon centers on the profound theological truth that salvation is not earned by human worthiness but is a divine gift extended to the humble and unworthy, illustrated through the story of shepherds who, despite their lowly status, were chosen to witness Christ's birth. It emphasizes that God's grace is sovereign—He qualifies the undeserving, gives clear direction through Scripture, and calls believers to immediate obedience, as the shepherds did when they rushed to find the infant Messiah. The message calls Christians to live with boldness and joy, sharing the gospel with urgency, as the shepherds did, because the good news of Jesus Christ is both life-altering and worth proclaiming. Rooted in passages like Romans 3 and Ephesians 2, it affirms that salvation is by grace through faith, not works, and urges believers to embrace simplicity, trust, and testimony in their walk with God.

Missionary Mark Helzerman
The sermon centers on the theological significance of Israel's restoration as a fulfillment of divine prophecy, emphasizing that God's faithfulness to His promises to Israel underscores the reliability of His word for the Church. Drawing from Exodus, Jeremiah, Ezekiel, and Romans, the preacher argues that anti-Semitism throughout history, including modern hostility, paradoxically fulfills biblical patterns of scattering and gathering, demonstrating God's enduring covenant with Israel. The missionary context in Papua New Guinea serves as a living illustration: by witnessing the return of Jewish people to Israel, the preacher strengthens the credibility of the gospel, showing that God's promises are not only true but actively being fulfilled. The message calls believers to stand with Israel not merely as a political or humanitarian act, but as a testimony to God's unchanging faithfulness, which in turn reinforces trust in the gospel's eternal promises. Ultimately, the sermon affirms that God's heart remains perpetually with Israel, and His faithfulness to them guarantees His faithfulness to all who call upon His name.

Financial Peace - Lesson 5
This sermon presents a biblically grounded, practical framework for understanding insurance not merely as a financial product but as an expression of stewardship and trust in God's provision. It emphasizes that insurance is a wise tool for managing risk and protecting assets, family, and long-term financial peace, especially in a world where unexpected events can quickly deplete savings. The speaker outlines eight essential types of insurance—health, auto, renter's, homeowner's, life, disability, umbrella, and long-term care—explaining their purpose, recommended coverage levels, and how they align with responsible financial planning, particularly in light of one's life stage, net worth, and dependence on income. While cautioning against underinsuring due to cost concerns, the sermon advocates for term life insurance over cash-value policies, promotes adequate liability protection, and highlights the importance of planning for future needs like long-term care, all while stressing that true security ultimately rests in faith in God's provision, not in human systems alone.

Cheerfully Waiting - Part 2
The sermon centers on the biblical imperative to add patience to one's faith, presenting it not as passive endurance but as a dynamic, God-ordained virtue essential for spiritual maturity. Drawing from 2 Peter 1:5–9, it emphasizes that patience—defined as cheerful endurance and long-suffering—is cultivated through tribulation, trials, and suffering, and is exemplified in the lives of biblical figures like Job, Abraham, Paul and Silas, and Stephen, as well as in the ministry of Christ Himself. The message underscores that patience is not merely a personal trait but a divine requirement for ministers, saints, and all believers, enabling effective service, perseverance in prayer, endurance amid persecution, and faithful anticipation of Christ's return. Ultimately, patience is portrayed as a necessary, deliberate growth process that, when embraced, leads to spiritual completeness and divine fruitfulness, fulfilling God's purpose for the believer's life.

Financial Peace - Lesson 4
This sermon presents a biblically grounded, practical case for prioritizing retirement savings as a form of faithful stewardship, emphasizing that planning for the future is not a lack of trust in God's provision but a responsible use of the resources He provides through labor and wisdom. Drawing from key Scripture passages—Matthew 25's parables of the wise and foolish virgins and the talents, 1 Timothy 5:8 on caring for one's household, and Ecclesiastes 7:11–12 on wisdom and wealth—the preacher illustrates that financial foresight, investing, and disciplined saving are consistent with biblical principles of prudence, responsibility, and care for others. The central teaching is that consistently investing 15% of one's income in tax-advantaged accounts, particularly through diversified growth stock mutual funds, can yield a sustainable, lifelong income through compound growth, with historical evidence showing the stock market's long-term reliability despite short-term volatility. The message is especially urgent for younger listeners, who can leverage time to build substantial wealth with modest contributions, while older individuals are encouraged not to despair, as meaningful progress is still possible with disciplined action. Ultimately, the sermon calls believers to view retirement planning not as a worldly pursuit but as a spiritual discipline of faithfulness, preparation, and love for family and future generations.

Listen To The Wise
The sermon centers on the transformative power of surrounding oneself with wisdom, drawing from Proverbs 13:20 and the story of the Magi in Matthew 2 to emphasize four key truths: Jesus is for everyone, transcending ethnic and cultural boundaries; Jesus is worthy of worship, demanding a reverent and heartfelt response; Jesus deserves the best, calling believers to offer their lives as living sacrifices; and Jesus directs the follower, guiding those who actively listen and obey His Word. Through vivid imagery and urgent pastoral appeal, the message challenges listeners to prioritize Scripture, reject worldly distractions, and live with intentional devotion, urging a personal, transformative encounter with Christ that reshapes identity, worship, and daily conduct.

The Great Exchange
The sermon centers on the transformative power of God's great exchange—where Christ trades His divine riches, joy, peace, love, and life for humanity's poverty, sorrow, trouble, hatred, and death. Drawing from personal testimony of a call to ministry, years of struggle, and faith-filled service in Cambodia, the preacher illustrates how God's grace redefines value, purpose, and hope. Anchored in Scripture—particularly Mark 8:36, 2 Corinthians 8:9, John 16:20, and Romans 5:8—the message emphasizes that true fulfillment comes not from worldly gain but from surrendering to Christ's redemptive exchange. The preacher calls believers to respond with wholehearted devotion, living sacrifices of service, joy, and evangelism, recognizing that every life is a mission field and every moment an opportunity to reflect God's eternal worth. The tone is deeply pastoral, convicting, and hopeful, urging listeners to embrace God's provision, reject selfishness, and actively share the gospel with urgency and love.

Cheerfully Waiting
The sermon, drawn from 2 Peter 1:1–9 and supplemented by passages from Galatians, Colossians, James, and Hebrews, centers on the imperative for believers to actively cultivate patience as a vital component of spiritual growth, rooted in divine power and the transformative nature of faith. It defines patience not as passive endurance but as cheerful, joyful perseverance marked by forbearance, self-control, and a refusal to grumble or fret, especially in trials, suffering, or interpersonal conflict. The preacher emphasizes that God's own character—patient, merciful, and long-suffering—serves as the model for believers, who are called to add patience to their faith as part of the fruit of the Spirit, regardless of personality, culture, or circumstance. Through examples like Job and the call to forgive, bear with one another, and support the weak, the message underscores that patience is both a personal discipline and a communal necessity, essential for maintaining unity, resisting offense, and fulfilling God's will in the face of delay or adversity. Ultimately, patience is portrayed not as a mere emotional state but as a deliberate, Spirit-enabled response to God's timing and grace, necessary for receiving His promises and reflecting His nature in a broken world.

Keeping It Clear
The sermon centers on the vital Christian discipline of maintaining a clear conscience before God and others, drawing from Paul's declaration in Acts 24:16 and reinforced by key passages such as 1 Timothy 1:5, 1 Peter 3:16, and Hebrews 9:14. It emphasizes that a clear conscience is not merely the absence of guilt but a dynamic state of moral integrity rooted in genuine salvation, continual repentance, and daily obedience to God's Word. The preacher calls believers to practice four spiritual disciplines—confession and repentance, faith and obedience, prayer and self-reflection, and accountability and transparency—as essential means to preserve inner purity and relational health. With a pastoral tone that is both convicting and comforting, the message urges Christians to confront hidden sins, resolve conflicts, and live with honesty, rejecting pretense and fostering genuine community, all in preparation for the new year and eternal accountability.

Wilt Thou Be Made Whole?
The sermon centers on the transformative question, 'Wilt thou be made whole?', drawing from John 5:1–9 to confront the spiritual complacency of believers who, like the man at Bethesda, remain passive despite divine opportunity. It emphasizes that while God offers healing, power, and community, true restoration requires personal responsibility, obedience, and a willingness to move beyond self-justification and blame. The preacher underscores the danger of spiritual stagnation—rooted in bitterness, sympathy, or cultural distractions—arguing that Christians must actively engage with Scripture, the church, and the Holy Spirit to grow beyond long-term infirmities. Drawing from Romans 8, Galatians 6, and Ephesians 4, the message calls for a deliberate choice to walk in the Spirit, mortify the flesh, and bear one another's burdens not through dependency, but through mutual accountability and grace. Ultimately, the sermon is a pastoral challenge to embrace spiritual maturity, reject passive waiting, and step forward in faith, knowing that God's power is available to those who are willing to be made whole.

Financial Peace - Lesson 3
The sermon presents a biblically grounded, step-by-step approach to personal financial stewardship, emphasizing that true peace comes from obedience to Scripture and disciplined financial habits. It outlines six concurrent steps—after eliminating debt and building an emergency fund—centered on investing 15% of income for retirement, saving for children's college (if desired), and paying off a mortgage early, all rooted in the principle of financial independence rather than retirement as an age. The speaker stresses that retirement is defined by a financial threshold, not a calendar year, and uses compound interest and long-term investing to illustrate how early, consistent action leads to sustainable security. While cautioning against greed and get-rich-quick schemes, the sermon affirms that wealth should be built not for personal indulgence but for generous giving, supporting missions, and helping future generations, all within a framework of faithful stewardship and contentment, with the ultimate goal of honoring God with all that He provides.

A Grateful Look At The 23rd Psalm
The 23rd Psalm is celebrated as a profound expression of divine care, portraying God as a personal shepherd who provides, restores, and protects His people. Central to its message is the transformative relationship between the believer and God—where trust in Christ as Saviour enables one to experience His presence, peace, and provision even in life's most difficult valleys. The psalm reveals God's intimate involvement in the believer's life: He satisfies spiritual hunger, restores brokenness, guides in righteousness, and offers comfort through trials, not by removing danger but by walking beside His people. Through vivid imagery of shepherds, green pastures, and restored souls, the sermon emphasizes that God's faithfulness leads to eternal security, where goodness and mercy follow the believer throughout life, culminating in eternal dwelling in His presence. The call is both a grateful reflection and a personal invitation to surrender fully to the Lord who is not only shepherd but Saviour, sustainer, and eternal home.

Charity Is The Greatest
This sermon, centered on 1 Corinthians 13, presents charity—agape love—as the enduring, defining virtue of the Christian life, surpassing even faith and hope. It argues that while spiritual gifts, knowledge, and prophecy are temporary and imperfect, charity never fails because it reflects God's eternal nature and is the only quality that truly impacts others. The passage is unpacked not as abstract doctrine but as a practical, self-examining call to embody love through patience, kindness, forgiveness, humility, and perseverance—especially in relationships marked by conflict, sin, or personal inconvenience. The preacher emphasizes that charity is not merely emotional warmth but a disciplined, Christ-like commitment to bear one another's burdens, believe in others' potential, hope for restoration, and reject envy, pride, and self-centeredness. Ultimately, the sermon challenges the congregation to live out this love not just in words or grand gestures, but in daily choices to suffer long, forgive freely, and seek others' good—recognizing that this is the most powerful witness to the world and the truest expression of Christian maturity.

When You Don't Get What You Want
The sermon centers on the transformative power of a personal relationship with Christ, illustrated through a heartfelt testimony of a young man's journey from religious familiarity to genuine faith, followed by a call to trust God's higher purposes even when His answers are not what we desire. Drawing from Psalm 10 and other biblical passages, the preacher emphasizes that God's ways are not our ways, and that true faith involves surrendering our value systems, embracing humility, and trusting God's wisdom, especially in times of unmet longing. The message calls believers to align their hearts with God's perspective, recognizing that His 'no' often leads to greater spiritual growth and deeper dependence, while also affirming the simplicity and grace of salvation through faith in Christ alone. The service culminates in a powerful invitation to receive Christ, followed by baptisms as acts of obedience, underscoring the church's commitment to discipleship and community.

Financial Peace 2025 - Lesson 2
The sermon presents a biblically grounded, step-by-step framework for achieving financial freedom through disciplined stewardship, emphasizing obedience to God's principles over worldly financial habits. Central to the message is the necessity of breaking free from debt by first establishing a $1,000 emergency fund, creating a detailed budget that prioritizes essentials and long-term goals, and applying the debt snowball method to systematically eliminate liabilities. Key theological themes include the biblical call to flee from debt, the importance of self-control over impulses, and the principle of planning ahead—illustrated through Jesus' teaching in Luke 14 about counting the cost before building a tower. The speaker underscores that financial peace comes not from wealth but from aligning one's finances with God's wisdom, including saving for future needs, avoiding credit card misuse, and trusting in divine provision rather than material security. Ultimately, the journey leads to a life of freedom, peace, and generosity, where financial decisions are rooted in faith, discipline, and a commitment to honoring God with all resources.

Five Triggers Of Pride
The sermon centers on the destructive nature of pride, illustrated through the fall of Lucifer in Ezekiel 28:11–19, identifying five key triggers: supremacy, knowledge, beauty, power, and possessions. Each of these attributes, though originally gifts from God, became instruments of pride when misaligned with humility, leading to spiritual ruin. The preacher emphasizes that pride is the root of all sin, defined as a constant preoccupation with self, while humility is the continual focus on God and others. Drawing from Scripture, historical examples, and cultural observations, the message calls believers to vigilance against these temptations, urging a life of self-denial, gratitude, and dependence on God, grounded in the truth that God resists the proud but gives grace to the humble.

The 4 A's Of Thankfulness
This sermon, rooted in Psalm 100 and structured around the four A's of thankfulness—awareness, acknowledgement, appreciation, and action—calls believers to embrace thankfulness not as a fleeting emotion but as a disciplined, intentional practice grounded in the unmerited grace of God. It emphasizes that Christian identity is inseparable from gratitude, highlighting God's sovereignty, mercy, and eternal truth as the foundation for joy and peace, especially in a culture marked by entitlement and distraction. The preacher challenges listeners to cultivate spiritual awareness by focusing on divine goodness amid life's trials, to consciously honor God's blessings, to genuinely value them, and to respond with tangible acts of kindness, forgiveness, and service—mirroring Christ's redemptive love. Drawing from Scripture, including the story of the ten lepers and the parable of the Good Samaritan, the message underscores that true thankfulness results in transformation, compelling believers to live out their faith in practical, selfless ways. Ultimately, the sermon affirms that gratitude is both a response to God's love and a means of deepening one's relationship with Him, calling the church to be a people marked by holy joy, truth, and sacrificial love.

Financial Peace 2025 - Lesson 1
This sermon presents a biblically grounded framework for achieving financial peace through faithful stewardship, emphasizing that true financial health begins with spiritual alignment and obedience to Scripture. It argues that financial struggles stem not from external circumstances but from poor stewardship, lack of contentment, and disobedience to God's principles—particularly the dangers of debt, the necessity of budgeting, and the call to prioritize heavenly treasures over earthly accumulation. The message underscores that God owns all things, and believers are entrusted with managing resources wisely by working diligently, spending less than they earn, saving for emergencies, and giving generously, all while rejecting the bondage of debt and the idolatry of money. Practical steps are introduced, including calculating net worth, creating a budget, and building an emergency fund, all rooted in the conviction that financial discipline is an act of faith and a reflection of one's relationship with Christ.

Understanding Suffering: Chapter 14 - Supplement
The sermon presents a theological and pastoral reflection on the nature of suffering, emphasizing that not all suffering stems from divine judgment, moral failure, or spiritual warfare. Drawing from Ecclesiastes and other biblical texts, it argues that suffering often results from three impersonal realities: natural disasters, accidents, and the inevitable physical entropy of aging. The preacher illustrates how events like avalanches, mudslides, lightning strikes, and structural collapses occur without regard to moral worth, underscoring that some tragedies are simply the consequence of natural laws and human fallibility. Similarly, accidents—such as falls, vehicle collisions, or workplace incidents—happen to the righteous and wicked alike, often due to human error or chance. The sermon concludes by affirming that aging and bodily decay are universal, governed by the second law of thermodynamics, and that the body's gradual decline is not a sign of divine abandonment but a reminder of human frailty. Ultimately, the message calls for humility, gratitude, and a reorientation toward worship, urging believers to recognize God's sovereignty even in the midst of inexplicable suffering.

Others First Before Me
The sermon centers on the biblical principle of servant leadership, emphasizing that true leadership is defined not by power or status, but by a commitment to the growth and discipleship of others. Drawing from Scripture, particularly 3 John 1:1–4 and Jesus' call to follow Him, it underscores that Christian leadership is rooted in humility, love, and self-sacrifice, with the ultimate goal of helping others walk in truth. The message highlights four transformative outcomes of serving others: refocusing the mind away from self, becoming a doer of God's Word, joining God in His redemptive work, and experiencing inner transformation that aligns the heart with Christ's. It calls believers to move beyond passive faith, to embrace practical obedience, and to invest in others—especially the young, the broken, and the lost—knowing that such service carries eternal significance and reflects the very nature of Christ's ministry.

What Can Gratitude Do For You?
Preaching Service The sermon centers on the transformative power of gratitude as a disciplined, biblical response to God's unchanging truth and faithfulness, rooted in Scripture such as 1 Thessalonians 5:16–18 and expanded through passages like Philippians 4 and Lamentations 3. It calls believers to reject emotionalism and self-centeredness, instead embracing a posture of thankfulness in all circumstances—whether in prosperity or suffering—as a means of accepting the present moment, maintaining spiritual integrity, and resisting deception. The message emphasizes that gratitude is not merely an emotion but a practice that brings peace, contentment, strengthened faith, joy, and a powerful testimony, ultimately glorifying God and advancing His kingdom. The preacher urges the congregation to live out this discipline daily, not for human approval but for divine honor, and invites both believers and seekers to respond in faith and thanksgiving.

Understanding Suffering: Chapter 13 - Quick Review
This sermon presents a comprehensive theological framework for understanding suffering, rooted in the biblical narrative from Genesis to Revelation. It begins by establishing that suffering did not originate with God, who declared creation 'very good,' but arose from the rebellion of Satan, the selfishness of humanity, and the pervasive reality of sin, all of which brought divine judgment and a cursed creation. Rather than viewing suffering as a sign of God's absence or injustice, the message reframes it as a divinely orchestrated means through which believers are strengthened, sanctified, and equipped for service. The sermon highlights twelve redemptive purposes of suffering, including the development of spiritual sufficiency, sanctification, service, emotional and mental resilience, and the promise of future glory, culminating in the ultimate restoration described in Revelation where all pain will be erased. Ultimately, suffering is portrayed not as an end in itself, but as a transformative tool that shapes character, deepens faith, and prepares believers for eternal reward and reign with Christ.

Mission Minded & Missionary Minded Too - Part 3
This sermon calls the church to move beyond mere mission-mindedness toward becoming a truly missionary-minded community, grounded in Philippians 2 and 4, where believers actively care for missionaries through moral, prayer, re-entry, communication, logistical, financial, and personal support. It emphasizes that missionaries are not superhuman but real people facing loneliness, trauma, cultural disorientation, and practical challenges, and thus require tangible, relational engagement rather than distant admiration. The church is invited to adopt specific missionaries, pray with specificity, send care packages, assist with re-entry and family needs, and even participate in short-term trips to build authentic relationships. By doing so, the congregation becomes a living expression of Christ's body, supporting both the spiritual mission and the human lives behind it, all while fulfilling the biblical principle that true partnership is marked by mutual encouragement and shared burden.

The Blessings Of God's Power
The sermon centers on the indispensable role of the Holy Spirit in the life of a believer, emphasizing that true Christian living is not defined by human effort or moral performance, but by surrender to the empowering presence of the Holy Ghost. Drawing from Scripture—particularly Luke 1:35, Acts 10:38, and Ephesians 4:30—it affirms that the Holy Spirit is the source of spiritual empowerment, character transformation, spiritual gifts, divine guidance, intimate fellowship with God, bold witness, and lasting joy and peace. The preacher calls believers to move beyond a superficial faith, urging them to yield fully to the Spirit's control, reject self-reliance, and embrace a life where God's power is visibly manifested in personal transformation, relational healing, and supernatural breakthroughs. The message is both convicting and hopeful, challenging Christians to stop relying on their own strength and instead access the boundless power of God through the indwelling Spirit, while also extending an urgent invitation to the unconverted to place their faith in Christ for eternal salvation.

Understanding Suffering: Chapter 12 - Station or Standing
The sermon presents a compelling vision of eternal reward for those who suffer or serve faithfully for Christ, emphasizing that earthly trials are not in vain but are foundational to one's eternal standing. Drawing from Scripture such as 2 Timothy 2:11–12, Revelation 20, and Romans 8:17, it teaches that suffering for Christ leads to a future of reigning with Him during the millennial kingdom and throughout eternity, where believers will hold positions of authority and service. The message underscores that eternal rewards—symbolized by crowns, inheritance, and divine purpose—are not automatic but are earned through faithfulness, martyrdom, and enduring persecution, particularly in the context of the coming tribulation. It challenges believers to prioritize eternal values over temporary comforts, warning that even saved individuals who live self-centered lives may miss out on these exalted roles, while those who endure will experience a glory far surpassing present sufferings. Ultimately, the sermon calls for a transformed worldview, urging Christians to fix their eyes on heavenly realities and to embrace sacrifice, knowing that their faithful service now secures an eternal, dynamic, and purposeful existence with Christ.