Épisodes

  • Psalm 98 - Awaiting the Bridegroom
    Dec 7 2025
    Psalm 98 calls us to joyful celebration of God’s salvation and coming victory. It invites all creation to sing, shout, and praise with instruments for His faithful mercy and righteousness. Though the world is broken by sin and injustice, we trust God’s promise: Christ will return to judge with perfect equity, renew all things, and bring His church to Himself. In the darkness, we hold fast to faith, labor hopefully, and rejoice in His sure deliverance.
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  • Ephesians 4:31 - 5:7 - Imitating God's Forgiveness and Love
    Apr 12 2026
    The Ephesians passage calls Christians to imitate God’s love and forgiveness. God’s forgiveness is not universal but granted to all who repent and trust in Christ. We are to cultivate a readiness to forgive anyone who asks, including enemies, desiring reconciliation, keeping a tender heart, and releasing sins upon repentance.
    Cancel culture, which rejects forgiveness, contradicts Christian faith. Biblical love is not fleeting emotion or tolerance, but Christ-like self-sacrifice that fulfills the law. It gives the benefit of the doubt, endures wrongs gracefully, and walks in ongoing forgiveness, reflecting God’s love for us.
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  • Psalm 99 - Thrice Holy Lord
    Dec 14 2025
    Psalm 99 praises the holy, enthroned Lord who reigns between the cherubim. It calls us to worship the thrice-holy God whose perfect justice and abundant mercy are perfectly balanced.
    Unlike human rulers, He loves righteousness and executes justice with equity. This holy God is both transcendent and near. The sermon highlights the paradox of justice and mercy, fully revealed and reconciled at the cross of Jesus Christ.
    Therefore, we are called to worship and revere the holy One who reigns supreme.
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  • Psalm 100 - Have a Merry Christmas!
    Dec 21 2025
    Psalm 100 is a joyful call to worship the reigning Lord. It issues seven commands: shout, serve, come, know, enter, give thanks, and bless His name. At its heart is the command to know the Lord, our Creator, Redeemer, and faithful Shepherd, who made and claims us as His own.
    This knowledge produces glad service and deep gratitude. As His beloved people, we belong to Christ and are commanded to rejoice in Him. Christmas reminds us that joy is not optional but a duty, anchoring us in hope amid trials and pointing to the eternal feast to come.
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  • Easter Sunday - Esther 7 - Laughter at the Foot of the Cross
    Apr 5 2026
    In Esther 7, Queen Esther shrewdly reveals Haman’s plot to destroy the Jews, pleading humbly for her life and her people’s. The king, enraged, leaves the banquet; Haman’s desperate plea ends with him falling on Esther’s couch, which the king sees as assault. Haman is hanged on the gallows he built for Mordecai.
    This foreshadows Easter: Haman dies on a tree, but Jesus, the true Hero, dies on a tree as victory. The cross was God’s trap; through death and resurrection, Christ outwitted sin, death, and darkness, plundering Hades. Christians can laugh at evil, for Christ has conquered. Humility brings true joy.
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  • Esther 5-6 - True Greatness
    Mar 29 2026
    Esther 5 and 6 contrasts fleeting worldly glory with true greatness. Haman’s arrogant plot for honor and revenge unravels as the sleepless king orders Mordecai honored by Haman himself. This humiliation foreshadows Christ’s triumphal entry and ultimate exaltation through humility (Philippians 2). Haman’s self-obsession leads to downfall; Christ’s obedience brings lasting glory. True greatness comes through humble submission to God, not envy or pride.
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  • Esther 4 - Who Knows?
    Mar 22 2026
    Esther 4 emphasizes doxology, giving glory to God, contrasting His generous sharing of glory with Haman's selfish ambition. Mordecai, distressed by the decree to destroy the Jews, urges Esther to risk death by approaching the king, humbling himself in repentance and affirming God's deliverance. He declares she may have been placed there "for such a time as this." God invites us to participate in His heroic deeds and share His glory, yet His kingdom prevails regardless, granting us boldness and rest in Christ's reign.
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  • Esther 2-3 - Soul Food
    Mar 15 2026
    The Book of Esther is a satirical tale set in the Persian court. Jewish orphan Esther becomes queen under King Xerxes. Her cousin Mordecai refuses to bow to the proud Haman, who then plots to annihilate all Jews. Through irony and dark comedy, the story reveals God's hidden providence, using ordinary faithful people to deliver His people and triumph over evil—demonstrating His faithfulness, justice, and redemption even when unseen.
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