
Rock Harbor Church
The newest sermons from Rock Harbor Church on SermonAudio.
Brandon Holthaus
Show overview
Rock Harbor Church launched in 2025 and has put out 108 episodes in the time since. That works out to roughly 95 hours of audio in total. Releases follow a weekly cadence.
Episodes typically run thirty-five to sixty minutes — most land between 49 min and 1h 1m — and the run-time is fairly consistent across the catalogue. None of the episodes are flagged explicit by the publisher. It is catalogued as a EN-language Religion & Spirituality show.
The show is actively publishing — the most recent episode landed 1 weeks ago, with 22 episodes already out so far this year. The busiest year was 2025, with 86 episodes published. Published by Brandon Holthaus.
From the publisher
The newest sermons from Rock Harbor Church on SermonAudio.
Latest Episodes
View all 108 episodesThe Power of Unseen Faithfulness | Rahab’s Story | Joshua 2 and Joshua 6
Unlocking the Hebraic Idioms of the Bible: Episode 32
Twisting Truth to Fit the Narrative Matthew 12:9-30
Unlocking the Hebraic Idioms of the Bible: Episode 31
Unlocking the Hebraic Idioms of the Bible: Episode 30
The Only Place Your Soul Will Ever Rest | Matthew 11:25-30; 12:1-21
The Offense of the Messiah: Matthew 11:1-24
How Scripture Corrects Our Disappointment with God: Luke 24:13–35

The Messianic Woes and Rewards | Matthew 10:32–42
In this powerful teaching from Matthew 10:32–42, Jesus reveals that His coming does not first bring peace, but division, as the message of the Kingdom confronts the world's values and even divides families. To confess the Messiah means putting Him above family, above approval, and even above your own life, as He calls His disciples to take up their cross—being willing to lose their life for His sake in order to truly gain it. This is part of the Messianic Woes, the pressure and persecution that come with following Him. Yet in the midst of that cost, there is incredible reward: God identifies with His messengers, so to receive a disciple is to receive Christ, and to receive Christ is to receive the Father. Even the smallest act, like giving a cup of cold water to someone associated with the Messiah, carries eternal reward—because everything done for Him has eternal value. #Matthew10 #MessianicWoes #Discipleship #FollowJesus #TakeUpYourCross #KingdomOfGod #Persecution #EternalRewards

Fear the Right Thing | Matthew 10:24–33
What are you afraid of? In this message, Jesus completely redefines fear. He tells His disciples they will be rejected, slandered, and persecuted just like He was, yet He commands them three times not to fear. Why? Because most of our fears are misplaced. We fear people, rejection, loss, and not being taken care of, but Jesus makes it clear that we are fearing the wrong thing. Man can only touch your body, but God holds your eternity. At the same time, the God we are to fear is also our Father, the One who sees the sparrow fall, knows every hair on your head, and values you far above all creation. This message will challenge you to shift your fear from man to God and replace insecurity with confidence in His care. Stop fearing the wrong things and start fearing the right One. #FearTheRightThing #Matthew10 #FearGod #DoNotFear #FaithOverFear #TrustGod #ChristianLiving #BiblicalTruth #EndTimes #RockHarborChurch

The Mission to Israel Continues: Matthew 10:11-23
In Matthew 10:11–23, Jesus sends His disciples on a mission specifically to Israel. This mission comes after the religious leaders rejected Him, and the Kingdom's offer was being postponed. At this stage, the mission does not include the Gentiles. Instead, it focuses on the "lost sheep of the house of Israel." The purpose of this mission was to identify, gather, strengthen, and prepare the believing Jewish remnant who recognized Jesus as Messiah. Jesus tells the disciples to continue proclaiming that "the Kingdom of Heaven is at hand," but the nature of the Kingdom program begins to shift. With Israel's national rejection, Jesus begins introducing what Scripture later calls the Mystery Kingdom—the present spiritual phase of the Kingdom, while the physical Messianic Kingdom is delayed. This mission comes before the Great Commission and reflects the biblical pattern of evangelism: "to the Jew first and also to the Gentile." But the mission to Israel does not end with the disciples. In this passage, Jesus gives prophecies that clearly extend far beyond their lifetime, including persecution before councils, testimony before governors and kings, family betrayal, and global hatred toward His followers. Most importantly, Jesus makes a remarkable statement: "You will not have gone through the cities of Israel before the Son of Man comes." This shows that the mission to Israel continues through to the Second Coming. Matthew 10 connects directly with the themes later expanded in the Olivet Discourse. The proclamation of the Kingdom continues among the Jewish people until Messiah returns. This passage also exposes the fatal flaw in Replacement Theology. If God were finished with Isr

Rejection Does Not Stop the Mission
In Matthew 9 and 10, we see a turning point in Messiah's ministry. The religious leadership has formally rejected Him, but the mission does not stop. It expands. Jesus looks at the multitudes and sees people weary and scattered, like sheep without a shepherd. Though the nation's leaders have rejected Him, His compassion has not diminished. The harvest is still plentiful. So what does He do? He builds a new leadership core. Jesus calls His twelve disciples — men who are not yet corrupted by the religious system — and He empowers them. He gives them authority over demons, authority to heal, and authority to proclaim the Kingdom of God. He not only gives them the message, He gives them the power to authenticate the message. He selects the right men. He empowers them. He instructs them. He mobilizes them. He prepares them for opposition. This section shows us a powerful principle: Rejection does not stop God's program. It advances it. Though Israel as a nation is moving toward judgment, the groundwork is being laid for something greater — the eventual expansion of the gospel beyond Israel and the formation of the Church. When the system rejects truth, God raises up new vessels. When leaders fail, God builds a remnant. When doors close, the mission advances. The King was rejected — but the Kingdom mission continues. Watch as we walk verse by verse through this strategic shift in Messiah's ministry and uncover what it means for us today. #Matthew9 #Matthew10 #KingdomOfGod #BibleTeaching #Prophecy #GreatCommission #JesusSends #ChurchAge #Dispensational #EndTimes

Unlocking the Hebraic Idioms of the Bible: Episode 29
In this Bible study, we explore the powerful final chapter of Isaiah and the transition into the book of Jeremiah. Isaiah 66 introduces one of the most sobering images in Scripture: "where the worm does not die and the fire is not quenched." This Hebrew idiom, later used by Jesus in the New Testament, points to the reality of eternal judgment and the seriousness of rejecting God. The imagery comes from the Valley of Gehenna outside Jerusalem, a place associated with continual burning and decay. Jesus referenced this same imagery in Mark 9 to warn about the eternal consequences of sin and the urgency of removing anything that keeps us from faith in Him. From there, the study moves into Jeremiah 2:13 and the powerful metaphor of "broken cisterns." God describes Israel abandoning Him, the fountain of living water, and digging their own broken reservoirs that cannot hold water. This vivid picture illustrates humanity's tendency to seek life, fulfillment, and security in things other than God. Throughout the teaching, we examine how these ancient warnings still apply today. People continue to build modern "cisterns" in money, power, relationships, pleasure, and self-reliance, yet only Christ offers the true living water that satisfies the soul. Jesus later stands in the temple and declares, "If anyone thirsts, let him come to Me and drink." The invitation remains the same today: stop trusting in broken cisterns and come to the source of living water. Topics covered in this study: • Isaiah 66 and the imagery of the undying worm • Jesus' teaching on Gehenna and eternal judgment • The doctrine of hell and God's justice • Jeremiah's warning about broken cisterns • Idolatry an

Unlocking the Hebraic Idioms of the Bible: Episode 28
In this powerful teaching from Isaiah 64, we unpack the rich Hebraic background behind phrases like "rend the heavens," "come down," and "the mountains might shake." These are not random poetic expressions. They are layered idioms filled with covenantal, prophetic, and eschatological meaning. What does it mean to ask God to tear open the heavens? Why do mountains symbolize governments? How does this passage connect to Mount Sinai, the Exodus, and the future Tribulation? This study reveals: • The Hebraic meaning of "rend the heavens" • How "coming down" connects to Sinai and divine intervention • Why mountains represent kingdoms and authority structures • Israel's future national repentance in the Tribulation • The difference between spiritual salvation and physical deliverance • The biblical meaning of the Potter and the Clay • A contextual breakdown of Romans 9 in light of Jeremiah 18 • Why misunderstanding Hebraisms leads to theological confusion We also explore the personal application. When God delays intervention in our lives, what is He teaching us? How does remembering past deliverance build faith for future rescue? Understanding the Jewish background of Scripture brings clarity to passages that are often misunderstood, especially in debates surrounding sovereignty, free will, and replacement theology. If you want to understand the Old Testament foundations behind the New Testament, and how prophetic passages fit into God's redemptive plan for Israel and the nations, this teaching will deepen your perspective. Subscribe for weekly biblical teaching, prophecy updates, and in-depth studies from Rock Harbor Church.

The Risk is Worth the Reward: Matthew 9:18-34
In The Risk Is Worth the Reward, we walk through Matthew 9:18–34 at a turning point in Jesus' ministry. After His formal rejection by the religious establishment, Jesus shifts His strategy. He no longer calls Israel to national repentance. Public signs are reduced to the sign of Jonah. Miracles now require personal faith. He teaches in parables and maintains a policy of silence regarding His Messianic identity until after the resurrection. To associate with Jesus at this stage meant risking expulsion from the synagogue system. Under synagogue discipline—Hezipah, Niddui, or even Cherem—a person could be rebuked, cast out, or permanently cut off from the community. Jairus, the bleeding woman, the two blind men, and the mute man all risked social and spiritual exile to come to Christ. They defied the system to receive life. Their physical afflictions pointed to deeper spiritual need. The world system cannot restore marriages, heal broken consciences, free people from sin, or raise what is dead inside. It declares things irreversible and beyond hope. But Jesus demonstrates resurrection power. Faith in Messiah becomes an act of defiance against a system built on accusation, condemnation, and outward appearance. This message calls believers to refuse the system's verdict of hopelessness. Mercy is found in Christ alone. His authority threatens systems that survive by control and accusation. The risk of following Him may be great—but the reward is life, restoration, and eternal freedom. Hashtags: #TheRiskIsWorthTheReward #Matthew9 #JesusAndTheSystem #FaithOverFear #ResurrectionPower #BiblicalTruth #SynagogueDiscipline #HopeInChrist #DefyTheSystem #GospelOfTheKingdom

When the System Rejects and the Savior Restores
In Matthew 9, Jesus collides head-on with a religious system that knew how to label people but had no power to restore them. Tax collectors, sinners, the sick, the ceremonially unclean, the blind, and the demonized were all considered beyond hope by Pharisaical Judaism. Their suffering was seen as deserved, their condition permanent, and their future sealed. But Jesus does something shocking. He calls Matthew out of a condemned identity. He eats with sinners the system had already judged. He corrects fasting that was rooted in religious performance rather than relationship. He restores a woman who had been isolated for twelve years because her body didn't work. He responds to Jairus, who risks his position and reputation by turning to the very Messiah the establishment rejected. He opens the eyes of blind men who see Him clearly while the religious leaders remain blind. And He delivers a demonized man whom the system could not help and instead accused. Matthew 9 reveals a powerful truth. Religious systems focus on outward conformity but cannot change the heart. They demand performance, enforce masks, and leave people trapped in hopeless cycles of behavior. Jesus does not come to repair that system. He fulfills the Mosaic Law and exposes Pharisaical Judaism as bankrupt, replacing it with a kingdom marked by mercy, restoration, and real transformation from the inside out. The question this passage leaves us with is simple but unsettling. Are we living under a system that teaches us to perform and pretend, or are we following a Savior who restores what religion has rejected? Hashtags #Matthew9 #JesusRestores #RejectedByReligion #GraceOverPerformance #GospelTruth #Kingdo

Unlocking the Hebraic Idioms of the Bible: Episode 27
In this powerful teaching, we will walk through Isaiah 63 and unpacks the rich Hebraic idioms that reveal the Messiah not only as the Suffering Servant of Isaiah 53, but also as the Divine Warrior King who returns in judgment and glory. This message explores: • The prophetic meaning of Edom and Basra • The significance of the Messiah's blood-soaked garments • The Day of the Lord and the Second Coming • How Isaiah 63 connects to Zechariah 14 and Revelation 19 • Why God's judgment passages bring comfort, justice, and hope • How trusting God with justice empowers true forgiveness Isaiah 63 presents a sobering yet hopeful picture of Jesus Christ as the righteous Judge who rescues Israel, defeats evil, and ultimately rights every wrong. This teaching also offers deep pastoral application on forgiveness, justice, discernment, and spiritual maturity in a broken world. We pray this message strengthens your faith, deepens your understanding of Scripture, and encourages you to trust God with both personal injustice and future hope. For more sermons, prophecy teachings, and biblical resources, visit: https://rockharborchurch.net Thank you for listening. Keep looking up, for our redemption draws near.

The Rejection of the Kosmos | Matthew 9:1–17
In Matthew 9:1–17, Jesus exposes the Kosmos, the world system built by man and energized by Satan, and shows why it inevitably rejects Him. Even after proving His divine authority by forgiving sins and healing the paralytic, the religious leaders respond with accusation rather than worship. Grace threatens their control. When Jesus calls Matthew, a tax collector condemned by the religious elite, the system reacts with outrage instead of celebration. The Kosmos has no category for mercy, repentance, or redemption. It only knows exclusion and self-righteousness. Jesus then explains that He did not come to patch up Pharisaic Judaism or fit His teaching into a works-based religious mold. Using the imagery of garments and wine, He reveals that His mission cannot be mixed with man-made religion. The Torah is good, but the Pharisaical system had distorted it. He came to fulfill God's Law, not validate their traditions. This passage shows a timeless reality. The world system rejects Jesus because it cannot coexist with grace, and it will always reject those who follow Him as well. #Matthew9 #TheRejectionOfTheKosmos #JesusIsGod #GraceNotWorks #NewWineNewWineskins #Pharisaism #FulfillmentOfTorah #KingdomOfGod #BiblicalChristianity #GospelOfGrace #FollowJesus #FaithOverReligion

Expelling Legion: A Preview of the Second Coming Matthew 8:28–34
When Jesus crosses into Gentile territory in Matthew 8, He's not just healing a man—He's confronting an occupying force. The demons call themselves "Legion," a Roman military term that mirrors the Gentile domination of Israel during the Times of the Gentiles foretold by Daniel. This encounter is a prophetic preview. The demons recognize Jesus' authority, fear judgment before the appointed time, and beg not to be sent to the Abyss. Their request to enter the pigs exposes their torment and destructive nature, while Jesus' authority over them foreshadows the final overthrow of Gentile power at His return. The townspeople beg Jesus to leave, choosing familiarity over freedom. One man, fully delivered, wants to follow Him—showing the divide between those who benefit from darkness and those rescued from it. This sermon reveals how Matthew 8 points beyond an exorcism to the Second Coming, when the King will return to crush the final empire and establish His everlasting kingdom. Watch and see how this powerful moment previews the end of the Times of the Gentiles and the return of Jesus Christ. #BibleProphecy #EndTimes #SecondComing #JesusIsKing #SpiritualWarfare #TimesOfTheGentiles #BookOfDaniel #Matthew8 #Deliverance #KingdomOfGod #IsraelInProphecy #ReturnOfChristWhen Jesus crosses into Gentile territory in Matthew 8, He's not just healing a man—He's confronting an occupying force. The demons call themselves "Legion," a Roman military term that mirrors the Gentile domination of Israel during the Times of the Gentiles foretold by Daniel.

Unlocking the Hebraic Idioms of the Bible: Episode 26
In this teaching, we walk through key Hebraisms that are often misunderstood and misused in modern theology. One of the most quoted passages, "My thoughts are not your thoughts," is frequently used to suggest that God is unknowable or irrational. But that is not what Scripture is teaching. This message explains the true biblical meaning behind this Hebraism by contrasting human wisdom with divine wisdom. God is not saying that His revelation is unknowable. He is saying that fallen human thinking is corrupted by sin and cannot rightly interpret reality apart from divine revelation. We explore how human autonomy, pride, and resistance to authority lead to spiritual harm, while submission to God's revealed order brings protection, clarity, and maturity. This includes a biblical look at repentance, faith, authority structures, and why God's way of salvation through the Messiah runs counter to human instincts. The teaching also examines the biblical role of the watchman, drawing from Isaiah, Ezekiel, Acts, and the words of Jesus. Scripture calls believers to spiritual vigilance, warning, and preparation, not silence. This message challenges the modern church's tendency toward emotional comfort over truth and explains why warning and preparation are acts of love. Topics covered include Human wisdom versus divine revelation Why God's thoughts are higher and holy The danger of autonomy without authority Repentance as a change of mind Faith that trusts God without full understanding The watchman calling in Scripture Why silence in the church is a serious failure Preparing believers psychologically and spiritually for what is coming