Archive for the ‘Resurrection’ Category

“Know The God Who Is Here And Is Coming!”

Part A:

Part B:

Full Message:


Scripture: Revelation 4


Summary:

This first Sunday of Advent invites us to awaken from spiritual sleep and lift our eyes to the God who is both here and is coming. In This powerful sermon, Pastor Tim reminded us that time is not a dull, repetitive cycle but a purposeful, forward-moving story shaped by God’s self-revealing love. As Karl Barth writes, “God’s revelation is His self-unveiling, in which He speaks for Himself and acts for Himself; in which He makes Himself known.” Advent is this unveiling. God showing Himself, not staying hidden, not remaining distant, but revealing His heart through Jesus Christ.

Using the imagery of a spiral staircase, the sermon teaches that we are all moving either upward toward Christ, or downward away from Him. There is no neutral place in discipleship. To face Jesus in trust is to ascend by grace; to turn away is to drift downward. This sober picture is intensified by the reality of human fragility, the certainty of death, and the nearness of Christ’s return. We are closer to His final appearing today than we were last year, last month, or even yesterday.

Advent also calls us to understand the one coming of Christ expressed in a three-fold way:

  1. Christ came in the Incarnation.
  2. Christ comes now in the Holy Spirit.
  3. Christ will come again in His final, glorious Advent.

This is not confusion or contradiction, it is God’s relational, dynamic way of revealing Himself. As T.F. Torrance beautifully puts it, “God does not remain at a distance but draws near to us in His incarnate Son, making Himself known within the fabric of our human existence.” This nearness is not metaphorical; it is the very heartbeat of Advent.

Pastor Tim also helped us understand biblical “separation from God” not as God’s absence but as our relational refusal. God is present everywhere, sustaining all existence, even in the depths. Hell itself is not the absence of God. Hell has to do with rejecting a relationship with the Father, Son, Holy Spirit God…And we know that separation from God is not something God chooses for people…Hell is the natural consequence of rejecting the relationship God continually offers.”

Advent calls us to reject our double-mindedness, embrace the God who is making Himself known, and respond with trust, repentance, and love.

As Advent begins, the message is clear:
Wake up. Lift your eyes. Receive the God who is here and coming. And invite others into this urgent, beautiful relationship while there is still time. Christ is coming soon and HIS PROMISE is our hope.

Key Themes and Reflection Questions:

  1. Wake Up to God’s Presence 👁️🔥
  • Theme: Advent shakes us from spiritual sleep, reminding us that God is already near, closer than our breath, and calling us to renewed awareness.
  • Discipleship Question: Where have you grown spiritually sleepy, and how is Jesus inviting you to wake up to His presence?
  • #WakeUpToChrist
  1. Time Is Moving Toward Christ’s Return ⏳👑
  • Theme: Time is not a repeating cycle but a God-directed story moving toward the glorious return of Jesus.
  • Discipleship Question: How does remembering Christ’s soon return shape your priorities this week?
  • #ChristIsComing
  1. The Spiral Staircase of Discipleship 🌀✝️
  • Theme: We are always moving, either upward toward Jesus by grace or downward by neglect; there is no neutral ground.
  • Discipleship Question: Are you facing Christ in trust, or drifting downward in self-reliance?
  • #StepTowardJesus
  1. The One Coming of Christ in Threefold Advent 🌟🕊️✨
  • Theme: Christ came in the Incarnation, comes now through the Spirit, and will come again in glory. One God revealing Himself in three relational ways.
  • Discipleship Question: Which aspect of Christ’s Advent: past, present, or future, do you need to reflect on more deeply this season?
  • #GodWhoComes
  1. Relationship, Not Distance, Defines Salvation ❤️‍🔥🤲
  • Theme: Separation from God is never His absence but our refusal of relationship and Advent calls us back into His embrace.
  • Discipleship Question: Who in your life needs the hope that God is always present and always pursuing?
  • #ChooseRelationship

Reflective Moment:

Take a quiet moment and allow the truth of Advent to settle into your heart: the God who created you is nearer than your own breath, and yet He is also the One who comes, revealing Himself, drawing near, and inviting you into relationship. Let this season lift your eyes above routine and awaken your spirit to His presence. Hear His whisper: “I am here. I am coming. Stay awake to Me.” Trust His nearness, embrace His coming, and let hope rise in you again.

“The Priority of Jesus for His Present Church!” 

Part A:

Part B:

Full Message:


Scripture: Acts 2: 36-42


Summary:

In this powerful and deeply reflective message, Pastor Timothy Brassell reminds us that Jesus is the living priority of His Church, not just in heaven, but here and now. Preaching from Acts 2:36–42, he invites us to rediscover the extraordinary presence of Christ in what we often call “ordinary time.” Though daily life may seem routine or wearisome, the Holy Spirit meets us in the ordinary, turning our everyday moments into sacred opportunities for transformation.

Pastor Tim explains that God Himself must teach us how to meet Him in Scripture. True preaching and faithful reading of the Bible begin not with what we should do, but with Who God is in Jesus Christ. The Father’s revelation in the Son, made alive to us by the Holy Spirit, draws us into participation with His divine life. Christ is both the message and the messenger, the Living Word through whom God reveals Himself and through whom we are transformed.

As theologian T. F. Torrance writes: “It is through Jesus Christ that we come to know God, for in Him the Word of God and the response of man meet together in one person.”— The Mediation of Christ

In this light, Pastor Tim reminds us that Jesus’ priorities for His Church, devotion to the apostles’ teaching, fellowship, breaking of bread, and prayer, are not four separate activities, but one shared life in Him. Through this shared life, the Church participates in Christ’s own faithfulness before the Father. God’s love, revealed unconditionally in Jesus, calls us not to passive belief but to unconditional surrender, a living response that takes shape through repentance, forgiveness, and the daily renewal of our hearts and communities.

This transforming love compels us to live and share the same grace we have received. Because the Father loves us unconditionally through the Son and Spirit, we are sent into the world to embody that same love. To be living witnesses of Christ’s ongoing life and mission.

As C. S. Lewis beautifully reminds us, “There are no ordinary people. You have never talked to a mere mortal.”— The Weight of Glory

Even the most ordinary days become extraordinary when Christ is at the center. Every word of Scripture, every act of fellowship, every prayer, and every moment of kindness is an encounter with the Living Word who still walks among His people.

Key Themes and Reflection Questions

  1. The Extraordinary in the Ordinary ✨🙌
    • Theme: What seems “ordinary” in our daily lives is actually extraordinary because Jesus is present in every moment. His Spirit turns even the mundane into a sacred space for transformation.
    • Discipleship Question: How can you become more aware of Jesus’ presence in your everyday routines this week?
    • #ExtraordinaryOrdinary
  2. The Priority of Jesus for His Church ⛪🔥
    • Theme: Jesus Himself remains the center and priority of His Church, His people, both on earth and in heaven, calling us to live in constant participation with Him.
    • Discipleship Question: In what ways can you make Jesus, not activity or achievement, the true center of your faith community?
    • #JesusFirst
  3. Hearing the Living Word through Scripture 📖🕊️
    • Theme: God meets us personally in Scripture through the Spirit of Jesus; true preaching and reading begin with Who God is, not what we can do.
    • Discipleship Question: When you open the Bible, are you seeking information or an encounter with the Living Word Himself?
    • #WordAndSpirit
  4. Repentance and Renewal 💧❤️‍🔥
    • Theme: Repentance isn’t about guilt but transformation. Turning from self-centered readings of Scripture to Christ-centered participation in His life and love.
    • Discipleship Question: What areas of your spiritual life might need to be re-centered on Jesus’ way rather than your own?
    • #RepentAndRenew
  5. Unconditional Love and Costly Forgiveness 💞✝️
    • Theme: God’s unconditional love revealed in Jesus calls us not to passive acceptance but to unconditional surrender and costly forgiveness that mirrors His own.
    • Discipleship Question: How can you practice forgiving others in the same costly, grace-filled way Jesus forgave you?
    • #LoveThatSurrenders

Reflective Moment:

In the quiet rhythm of ordinary days, we are reminded that God still speaks, not only in the spectacular, but in the steady, everyday moments where His presence often goes unnoticed.
When we slow down and allow Scripture to reveal Who He is before asking what we must do, we discover that Jesus Himself is our pattern of life, the Living Word who interprets both Scripture and our hearts.

Let His unconditional love draw you into unconditional surrender.
Let His forgiveness teach you the costly joy of forgiving others.
And let His Spirit renew your ordinary moments into holy encounters with the extraordinary Christ.

“The Healing Joy of God: Discovering Health in the Life of the Trinity!”

When my husband and I returned home after visiting our son and his family, my heart was overflowing. We had just witnessed the blessing of our grandson. A sacred moment of new life, laughter, and grace.

His hugs and kisses, his bright eyes and wide smiles, even the way he giggled at the smallest things, all of it felt like sunlight to my soul. Watching him play, hearing cooing, and babbling, I felt renewed. His laughter was contagious. It filled the room with something deeper than happiness; it was life.

In those moments, I realized that the God who made us for relationship heals us through relationship. His life and joy reach us not only through Scripture and prayer but also through the touch of a child, the laughter shared across generations, and the warmth of belonging.

As someone living with diabetes, I’ve known the challenge of managing sugar levels, the careful balance of food, medication and exercise. But while I was there with my family, something remarkable happened. My blood sugar stayed in the normal range the entire time. No stress spikes, no imbalance, just peace. My dad always said that the grandkids gave him five more years, and I see that now.

I’m discovering that health is not only about what I eat, it’s also about what I carry in my heart. The stress, the worry, the hidden tensions of life can weigh the body down.

God reminded me through my grandson’s laughter that true health begins not in the body alone but in the heart. In union and communion with Him.

Health in the Light of the Trinity

The Christian understanding of health is never purely physical. It is spiritual and relational. We are made in the image of a God who is not solitary but Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. A living communion of love, joy, and mutual giving.

Theologian T. F. Torrance tells us: “In Jesus Christ, the healing of our human nature has already taken place in the incarnate constitution of His Person.”— T. F. Torrance, The Mediation of Christ

This means that healing is not something we chase inside ourselves. It’s something we receive by grace through faith and participation in Christ’s own restored humanity. As we receive Him, our physical, emotional, and spiritual lives are being made whole.

Our stress, anxiety, and even our diseases have not been ignored by God. They have been taken up into Christ’s life, embraced by His compassion, and transformed by His resurrection power. Through the Spirit, He comes again and again to conform us to the victory over these things He has pulled off for us!

Joy as Medicine for the Soul

Scripture tells us, “A joyful heart is good medicine, but a broken spirit dries up the bones.” (Proverbs 17:22, CSB)

When I laughed with my grandson, I wasn’t just enjoying a sweet moment, I was sharing in the joy of God Himself, Him sharing His Self with me through His Son and Spirit. Through union with Jesus, joy is not a fleeting emotion; it is the echo of divine life.

Karl Barth said: “Joy is the simplest form of gratitude.”— Karl Barth, Church Dogmatics IV/3 §67

Gratitude opens our hearts to the Spirit’s renewing presence. Joy is the sound of the Trinity’s life reverberating within us; Father, Son, and Spirit delighting in love. When we live from that place, our bodies and minds align with divine rhythm. The stress that drains us gives way to Jesus’ peace that heals us.

Living from the Inside Out

Modern medicine increasingly recognizes the connection between emotional and physical health. But long before science could prove it, Scripture revealed that peace, love, and joy are not luxuries, they are the oxygen of our being.

When Jesus said, “My peace I give to you” (John 14:27), He wasn’t offering a mere feeling. He was sharing His own life with the Father in the Spirit, a peace that flows from the very heart of God. To live in that peace is to live in divine health.

“In the joy of the eternal love, God’s Spirit makes the world rejoice and gives it a share in the divine joy.”— Jürgen Moltmann, The Spirit of Life: A Universal Affirmation

This means that laughter around a family table, a grandchild’s giggle, or a quiet morning of rest, all these  can become sacred spaces where divine life breathes healing into our humanity.

Reflection

Perhaps the greatest medicine we can receive is not found in a bottle or a diet plan, but in the joy of participation. The joy of knowing that the Father’s love, the Son’s healing, and the Spirit’s peace are already working in us. Even in illness, we are not alone. We are surrounded, upheld, and can be renewed by the healing joy of the Triune God.

Prayer

Lord, thank You for who YOU ARE. Thank you for reminding me that my health is not separate from You. Teach me to rest in Your joy and release every stress into Your hands. Let Your laughter echo in my soul, and may Your peace shape my body, my mind, and my heart until all of me reflects the wholeness of Your Triune love. Amen.

“How to Hear and Receive Father God’s Word! Pt 1”

Part 1A:

Part 1B:

Full Message:


Scripture: Acts 2: 42


Summary:

This week’s message from Pastor Timothy Brassell offers a deeply clarifying and convicting call to return to the foundation of all true Christian life and preaching — Jesus Christ Himself. The sermon, drawn from Acts 2:42, explores what it really means to hear and receive God’s Word as Jesus intends, not as a set of “how-to” instructions, but as a living participation in His ongoing relationship with the Father through the Holy Spirit.

Pastor Tim reminded listeners that worship is never something we perform or generate: “When we gather, we are not just getting our praise on; we are participating in Jesus’ own worship of the Father.” True discipleship, then, begins not with our doing, but with our being. Being joined to Christ, who is the living Word of God.

As Karl Barth declared in The Barmen Theological Declaration (1934):

“Jesus Christ, as he is attested for us in Holy Scripture, is the one Word of God which we have to hear, and which we have to trust and obey in life and in death.”

This powerful truth framed the entire message: the Church’s greatest need is not more information, activity, or innovation. It is devotion to the one Word of God: Jesus Christ.

Pastor Tim emphasized that every sermon, every act of worship, and every reading of Scripture must be centered on Christ, interpreted through Christ, and lived out in participation with Christ. Without Him as the content and foundation, even the most well-intended message becomes hollow.

From Acts 2:42, he identified the early Church’s threefold devotion, a model for the Church today:

  1. Devotion to Jesus Himself
  2. Devotion to the Proclamation of Jesus
  3. Devotion to the Apostolic Teaching of Scripture

Through these, believers move from hearing about God to hearing from God.

Key Themes and Reflection Questions:

  1. Jesus Is the Foundation 
    1. Theme: Every true word of God flows from the person of Jesus Christ. Without Him as the foundation, the Christian message collapses into moralism or self-help. Discipleship Question: Is Jesus the foundation of your daily thoughts, choices, and actions, or have you built on something else?
    #ChristOurFoundation
  2. Hearing the Word in Christ 
    1. Theme: Hearing God’s Word means joining in Christ’s own conversation with the Father. Scripture becomes alive when we listen through Him. Discipleship Question: How are you intentionally listening for Christ’s voice through Scripture this week?
    #HearingThroughChrist
  3. Devotion to Apostolic Teaching 
    1. Theme: The early Church grew because it was devoted to the apostles’ teaching. Scripture that proclaimed Jesus as the Living Word. Discipleship Question: How can you grow in devotion to the apostles’ teaching, so your faith remains rooted in Christ and not in culture?
    #DevotedToTheWord
  4. Guarding the Gospel 
    1. Theme: There is only one Gospel. The Gospel of Jesus Christ. Any message that sidelines Him for other topics loses the life-giving power of grace. Discipleship Question: Are you discerning what you hear and read through the lens of Jesus as the true Gospel?
    #OneTrueGospel
  5. Participation, Not Performance 
    1. Theme: The Christian life is not about doing things for God, but joining Christ in what He is already doing through you. Discipleship Question: In what ways can you shift from performing for God to participating with Him this week?
    #LifeInParticipation

Reflective Moment: 

“Lord Jesus, quiet my heart, open my ears, to hear You. Let every word I read, every song I sing, and every prayer I pray draw me deeper into Your life and love. Tune my heart to listen, not for information, but for transformation. May my worship, reading, and serving be rooted in You, the one Word of God whom I must hear, trust, and obey in life and in death. Draw me into Your divine conversation with the Father, and help me to live as a true participant in Your ongoing life and mission. Amen.”

“Some Specific Areas of Repentance for Jesus’ Church!” Pt 1

Part 1A:

Part 1B:

Full Message:


Scripture: Acts 2: 37-47


Introduction:

In an age when culture often redefines Christianity, this Gospel message of Acts 2 comes as both a clarion call and a corrective lens. This sermon urgently challenges believers to repentrecenter, and realign our faith with the life and teaching of Jesus Christ as preached by the Apostles and preserved in Scripture.

Pastor Timothy Brassell begins by stating what many of us need to hear: our view of repentance is often too vague, and our Gospel too shallow. But in the light of Acts 2, we are called to respond, not with fear, but with clarity and joyful surrender.

Summary:

This powerful gospel filled sermon opens by reminding us that Pentecost wasn’t just a moment, it was a movement of the Holy Spirit that continues today. In Acts 2:36–41, Peter preaches boldly, calling his hearers to recognize Jesus as both Lord and Messiah. Their response is not passive: they are pierced to the heart, and thousands repent, are baptized, and begin a new life of devotion.

But this repentance is not a moral checklist, it’s a Spirit-led turning toward Christ, in every part of life. As Pastor Tim declares, Jesus Himself is our repentance. He is the one who acts for us, and in Him, we are free to respond, not out of fear, but out of joy.

“Jesus Christ is not only God’s address to man; He is man’s address to God.”
— T.F. Torrance, The Mediation of Christ

This message invites us to rethink repentance, not as a condition to gain God’s favor, but as a response to the grace already given in Christ. Our evangelism, theology, and church life must reflect that truth.

“Fallen man is not simply an imperfect creature who needs improvement: he is a rebel who must lay down his arms… This movement full speed astern is what Christians call repentance.”
— C.S. Lewis, Mere Christianity

This sermon then highlights Acts 2:42,  a verse too often overlooked as the culmination of repentance. The early believers didn’t just make a decision. They devoted themselves to the Apostles’ teaching, fellowship, the breaking of bread, and prayer.

“In Jesus, God wills to be true God not only in the height but also in the depth — in the depth of human creatureliness, sinfulness and mortality.”
— Karl Barth, Church Dogmatics IV/1

This is why our repentance must touch real life. Our jobs, families, habits, thoughts, social media, and priorities. If Christ has entered the depth of our humanity, then nothing in us is off-limits to His redeeming work.

This message ends by confronting modern distortions: when we prioritize the American dream over God’s kingdom, treat the Gospel like a contract, or see ministry as someone else’s job, we have drifted. And the call of Acts 2 is to come home.

Key Themes and Reflection Questions:

1. Gospel Accuracy and Bold Proclamation 📣📖

  • Theme: Like Peter, we must proclaim a clear, Christ-centered Gospel that does not depend on human effort but celebrates divine grace.
  • Reflection Question: Have I clearly understood and accurately shared the Gospel, or have I embraced a cultural version?
  • #PreachTheTrueGospel

2. Repentance Is Real and Daily 🔄🕊️

  • Theme: Repentance is not abstract sorrow. It’s a daily turning toward Jesus in the details of life.
  • Reflection Question: What is one area in my life where Jesus is calling me to lay down my arms and return to Him?
  • #LifestyleOfRepentance

3. Devotion to Apostolic Teaching 📚🔥

  • Theme: Acts 2:42 shows the early believers were committed to Scripture and truth, not trends or personalities.
  • Reflection Question: Has my hunger for the Word of God grown or faded in this season?
  • #DevotedToDoctrine

4. Rejecting the American Dream Theology 🇺🇸💭🚫

  • Theme: We often place cultural success at the center of our faith. But Jesus must reign alone.
  • Reflection Question: Have I expected God to serve my dreams rather than submit to His?
  • #ChristOverCulture

5. Growth Is Not Optional 🌱🧠

  • Theme: Like Jesus grew in wisdom and stature, every disciple is called to ongoing transformation.
  • Reflection Question: How am I actively growing in the grace and knowledge of Jesus Christ?
  • #GrowInGrace

Reflective Moment: Returning to the Center

“They devoted themselves to the apostles’ teaching, to the fellowship, to the breaking of bread, and to prayer.”— Acts 2:42

This isn’t a call to performance; it’s a call to participation. To repent is not to prove ourselves worthy, but to respond to the One who already stood in our place. In Christ, God has descended into the very depths of our brokenness to lift us into the life of His Spirit. You don’t need to earn this, just receive, respond, and remain.

“God does not deal with us on the basis of a contract. He acts toward us in grace.”
(Torrance, paraphrased truth from sermon)

The Gospel is not a transaction; it’s a transformation. So, let us repent, not because we fear rejection, but because we’ve been irrevocably accepted in Jesus Christ.

“God Is for Us; The Satan Against Us!”

Part A:

Part B:

Full Message:


Scripture: Acts 2: 36-41 James 4: 7-10


Summary:

This powerful message, based on Acts 2:36–41 and James 4:7–10, highlighted God’s holiness, the reality of spiritual opposition, and the gift of repentance. Pastor Timothy Brassell reminded us that our God is a consuming fire. A God who says “yes” to His Son Jesus and “no” to anything that stands apart from Him. Repentance is not simply about turning away from sin; it is about turning toward Christ in trust and obedience, a continual relational act empowered by the Spirit.

As Karl Barth reminds us: “The preaching of the Gospel is the power of God because it brings about repentance, the radical turning of man away from himself and to God, away from sin and to grace.” (Church Dogmatics II/2, p. 744)

The sermon emphasized that salvation is dynamic, not static. It is not just a past event but an ongoing journey of becoming, walking with Christ daily, saying “yes” to God and “no” to all that opposes Him. In this battle, we are reminded that the adversary is real. Satan seeks to divide, deceive, and discourage, but he is not God’s equal. In Christ, we resist him by submitting to God, drawing near to Him, and relying on the Spirit’s power.

Repentance, Pastor Tim explained, is one of God’s greatest relational powers. It may feel painful, like going against yourself, cutting off something familiar, but it is the way God- Father-Son and Holy Spirit, turns our lives right side up. Just as 3,000 people responded to Peter’s message at Pentecost, we are urged today to respond with faith, repentance, and baptism, receiving the promise of the Spirit.

And as Augustine declared: The devil is conquered, not by our power, but by the blood of the Lamb and by the word of our testimony.”(Tractates on the Gospel of John, Tractate 84, §2)

In Christ, we share in His victory over sin, death, and the devil. Salvation, therefore, is not simply about avoiding evil, but about entering deeply into the life of God who is for us, even as the adversary is against us.

Key Points and Highlights

  1. God Is a Consuming Fire 🔥👑
  • Theme: God’s holiness includes both a “yes” to His Son Jesus and a “no” to everything opposed to Him. He accepts us in Christ while rejecting sin and rebellion.
  • Discipleship Question: Where in your life do you need to say “no” so that your “yes” to Christ is clear?
  • #GodIsAConsumingFire
  1. Repentance: God’s Relational Power 🔄❤️
  • Theme: Repentance is not simply turning from sin but turning toward Christ in trust and obedience. It is one of God’s greatest relational powers, a continual act that often feels painful but turns our lives right side up.
  • Discipleship Question: How will you practice repentance as a daily response to God’s love this week?
  • #DailyRepentance
  1. Salvation as a Living Journey 🚶‍♂️⛰️
  • Theme: Salvation is dynamic, not static. It is not just a past event but an ongoing walk of faith and obedience. In Christ, we say “yes” daily to God’s transforming work, trusting Him to complete what He has begun.
  • Discipleship Question: What step of obedience is God calling you to take right now in your journey?
  • #LivingSalvation
  1. The Adversary and Our Resistance ⚔️🐍
  • Theme: Satan is real and seeks to divide, deceive, and discourage, but he is not God’s equal. We resist him by submitting to God, drawing near to Christ, and relying on the Spirit’s power. The devil is conquered not by our strength but by Christ’s blood and our faithful testimony.
  • Discipleship Question: How can you actively resist the enemy this week by submitting to God?
  • #ResistTheEnemy
  1. Hope in the Victory of Christ ✝️🏆
  • Theme: Christ has already defeated sin, death, and the devil. Repentance, baptism, and life in the Spirit anchor us in His triumph. Our calling is to share in His victory and bear witness to His saving power.
  • Discipleship Question: How can remembering Christ’s victory give you courage in the struggles you face?
  • #VictoryInChrist

Reflection Moment

Take a pause and ask yourself:
Where is God calling me to turn from self-reliance and cling to Christ more fully?

Remember: Repentance is not condemnation. It may feel costly, but it is God’s gift of love and power to turn you right side up in Christ. Your victory is not found in your strength, but in the blood of the Lamb and in the Spirit who empowers your testimony. It is God’s-Father, Son and Holy Spirit invitation into deeper life with Him. Resist the adversary not by fear, but by fixing your eyes on Jesus, who has already overcome.

“Turn To Jesus And Away From The Demonic!”

Part A:

Part B:

Full Message:

Scripture: Acts 2: 29-41


Summary:

In this bold, Spirit-filled sermon, Pastor Timothy Brassell offers a clarifying and convicting look at repentance through the lens of Peter’s sermon in Acts 2:29–41, delivered on the Day of Pentecost. Far from a guilt-driven concept, repentance is portrayed as a joyful, relational, Spirit-empowered turning; not just from sin, but toward Jesus Christ, who is the revelation of God’s love and grace.

The message begins by grounding listeners in the Trinitarian mission of God. Pastor Tim emphasizes that God is not a generic being in the sky, but Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, eternally relational and now present in Jesus. When Peter preached to a crowd of thousands in Jerusalem, he called them to repent and be baptized, not as a way to earn forgiveness, but because forgiveness had already been secured in Christ.

The sermon makes clear that repentance isn’t merely turning from sin, it is turning to God in Christ. That distinction is vital. Many try to repent by cleaning themselves up or breaking habits, but biblical repentance starts by looking to Jesus. Only in His presence do we receive the power to turn. To try repentance apart from Christ is to fall into legalism or self-help religion.

🧲 A Powerful Illustration:

Using a set of bent wrenches and magnets, Pastor Tim gives a vivid picture of repentance. Like warped tools, we are bent out of shape by sin and brokenness. But Jesus, as the magnet, draws us to Himself, even while we’re still crooked. As we stay near Him, our lives begin to realign. Repentance is less about straining and more about staying close to Jesus, the only one who can truly reshape us.

✝️ Repentance: What Jesus Has Done for Us:

One of the most powerful and radical truths proclaimed in this message is that Jesus repented for us. Though God is not a man that He should repent in His eternal being, God became man in Jesus Christ, and in our human flesh, He repented perfectly for us, fulfilling all righteousness.

This truth shocks even the religious mind, just as John the Baptist was shocked when Jesus came to be baptized in a baptism of repentance (Matthew 3:11, 13–17). Yet Jesus insisted, saying it was necessary “to fulfill all righteousness.” Why? Because He took on our sinful nature (though He Himself never sinned), and in it, turned fully to the Father, on behalf of all humanity.

Repentance, then, is not about “doing better”, it’s about joining the One who already did everything perfectly, and who now calls us to participate in His life through the Spirit.

🚨 The Stakes Are Real: Turn to Jesus or Be Turned by the World:

Pastor Tim asks a piercing and urgent question:

“Are you becoming more and more a heavenly creature by turning to Christ or more and more a hellish and devilish creature by turning away from Him?”

Repentance is not optional. It is essential. We are all being shaped, either by Christ’s love or by the powers of darkness that seek to scatter, isolate, and destroy. Repentance is the process of becoming whole, of being reconciled, and of being drawn into God’s eternal love. The enemy seeks to separate and divide; Christ unites and restores. We’re not fighting flesh and blood; we’re resisting demonic forces of disconnection.

The message challenges believers not to settle for religious activity or surface-level faith. Instead, we’re called to embrace the life of repentance, a life of intimacy with Jesus, openness to the Spirit, and childlike trust in the Father’s unshakable love.

💖 A Revelation of God’s Heart:

Ultimately, this sermon reveals that Jesus Christ is not just the means of repentance, He is the message. He is the very image of God, showing that God is:

  • Good
  • Humble
  • Creative
  • Lowly
  • Loving
  • And passionately committed to humanity

Jesus is the living proof that mankind is the object of God’s affection, not His anger. God’s justice does not cancel His mercy, it is fulfilled in love through Jesus, who was crucified and raised for our salvation.

 Key Points and Highlights:

1. 🔄 Repentance Is Relational, Not Just Behavioral

  • Turning to Jesus is the beginning of true change. We’re called not just to turn from sin, but to turn toward God.
  • Discipleship Question: What area of your life needs less striving and more surrender to Jesus?

2. 💌 God’s Grace Comes Before Your Repentance

  • Repentance doesn’t earn forgiveness; it receives what’s already been given in Christ.
  • Discipleship Question: Are you resting in God’s grace or trying to clean yourself up before receiving it?

3. 🧲 God Reshapes You, Even When You’re Still Bent

  • Like broken tools drawn to a magnet, our lives realign only as we stay near Jesus.
  • Discipleship Question: Where are you seeing God slowly but faithfully reshaping you right now?

4. ⚔️ Spiritual Opposition Is Real, But So Is Victory

  • Behind much of our resistance to repentance is demonic separation. The battle is spiritual.
  • Discipleship Question: Are you recognizing the enemy’s tactics in your life or calling them something else?

5. ✝️ Jesus Repented For You. Now Walk With Him

  • Jesus, in His humanity, turned fully to the Father on your behalf. Repentance is now participation in His life.
  • Discipleship Question: How can you respond to Jesus’ repentance with trust instead of trying harder?

📌 Final Reflection:

“Jesus didn’t come to condemn you, but to turn you back to the Father.”
In repentance, you’re not running from failure, you’re running into grace.

Impossible Love, Made Possible in Christ

Are you struggling to love those who hurt you? Christ makes the impossible possible.

We’ve all heard the sayings: “Love your neighbor as yourself” and “Do unto others as you would have them do unto you.” Simple words, easy to quote but far harder to live. Loving those who love us back feels natural. But what about those who wound us, oppose us, or repay kindness with cruelty? On our own, it feels impossible to extend grace in those moments. And that’s the truth: left to ourselves, it is impossible!

If I’m being real, I’ve struggled greatly with showing grace in the face of so much hurt in this world. Forgiveness is hard because I’m realizing I don’t have it to give on my own. My patience runs out. Your patience runs out. Our compassion falters, doesn’t it? But, fortunately for us, in Jesus Christ there is a greater love that never fails. Through His Spirit He supplies what we lack and makes possible what is impossible for us apart from Him!

“God’s love has been poured out in our hearts through the Holy Spirit who was given to us.”Romans 5:5, CSB

I believe that C.S. Lewis captured this reality so well when he wrote:

“The Christian does not think God will love us because we are good, but that God will make us good because He loves us.”
— C.S. Lewis, Mere Christianity

This is the hope of the Gospel: kindness and forgiveness are not virtues we manufacture by willpower; they are gifts of grace that Christ forms in us through His love.

T. F. Torrance reminds us of Jesus’ significant place in all of this love and forgiveness business:

“Jesus Christ is both God’s Word to man and man’s answer to God; in Him God’s love for man and man’s love for God meet in perfect at-one-ment.”
— The Mediation of Christ

Jesus is our Mediator. He stands in for us, offering His perfect love to the Father on our behalf, and making that same love available to flow through us toward others. It is only through His mediating life that we can forgive the unforgivable and love the unlovable.

Jesus Himself said it plainly:

“Remain in me, and I in you. Just as a branch is unable to produce fruit by itself unless it remains on the vine, neither can you unless you remain in me.”John 15:4, CSB

Apart from Him, we cannot bear fruit. But in Him, kindness, forgiveness, and love become possible. Not because of our effort, but because His life is flowing through us.

Christlike kindness also doesn’t mean ignoring evil or allowing ourselves to be endlessly mistreated. Love is not blind tolerance. It is holy, discerning, and often courageous. The Spirit equips us to build “healthy connections while also maintaining healthy boundaries“. Sometimes love looks like patient presence. Sometimes it looks like gentle correction. And sometimes it means stepping back, while continuing to pray for the other person.

As Karl Barth wrote, God’s “No” to sin is always spoken within His greater “Yes” to humanity in Christ. In the same way, our boundaries can actually be an act of love, protecting what is good while still affirming the worth of the person before us.

“Therefore, as God’s chosen ones, holy and dearly loved, put on compassion, kindness, humility, gentleness, and patience, bearing with one another and forgiving one another if anyone has a grievance against another. Just as the Lord has forgiven you, so you are also to forgive.”
Colossians 3:12–13, CSB

The world tells us that outrage is power, that payback is justice, and that hatred has the last word. But the Gospel reveals a deeper truth: “Love never ends” (1 Corinthians 13:8, CSB).

“Hate has an end. Love has already won in Christ”. In His human life, on the cross, and in His Resurrection, Jesus showed that forgiveness is stronger than vengeance, hope is greater than despair, and mercy is mightier than condemnation.

When we walk with our Savior, the impossible task of loving others becomes possible. We are not doing it alone. We are participating in His life, His patience, and His victory. Quite literally, through the Holy Spirit and His Oneness with Jesus, we actually get to share in Jesus’ own life before the Father!

“And be kind and compassionate to one another, forgiving one another, just as God also forgave you in Christ.”Ephesians 4:32, CSB

This week, ask yourself:

  • Who in my life needs to see Christ’s kindness through me?
  • What is one way I can show love, even a small gesture, to someone who may not return it?
  • Where might I need the Spirit’s discernment to set healthy boundaries while still remaining Christlike?

As we surrender our hurts to Jesus at the foot of the cross, our lives become transformed, and we become living testimonies that in Jesus Christ, love always has the final word.

“Hate has an end. Love has already won in Christ.”

Lord Jesus,
You loved us when we were unlovable, and You forgave us when we had nothing to offer. I confess that on my own I don’t have the patience, the grace, or the strength to love others well, let alone forgive them fully. But You do. Fill me with Your Spirit so that Your kindness and forgiveness flows through me. Teach me when to stay present, when to speak truth, and when to set healthy boundaries in love. Give me wisdom, compassion, and courage. And let every act of grace point back to You, the ONE who has already conquered hate with love. Amen.

“Here Is The Good News For Everyone!”

Adoption Into God’s Family

Part A:

Part B:

Full Message:


Scripture: Ephesians 1: 3-6


Summary:

This sermon was a powerful reminder of the simplicity and depth of the gospel message. Pastor Tim began by grounding us again in the basic story of Jesus, not because it is shallow, but because it is the foundation we must always return to.

The gospel is not merely information or religious teaching; the gospel is God Himself, revealed in Jesus Christ. From eternity, God the Father has loved the Son in the fellowship of the Holy Spirit, and His mission has always been to draw humanity into that loving relationship.

Jesus came to live as one of us, fully God and fully human so that we could hear God’s Word, receive His grace, and be restored into fellowship with Him. The cross is not simply a tragic event; it is the victory of God over sin and death. The resurrection is not merely a happy ending; it is the beginning of new creation where humanity is lifted up and made whole in Christ.

This sermon reminded us that grace is not just “God overlooking mistakes,” but grace is a Person, Jesus Christ Himself, who receives from the Father on our behalf, lives faithfully where we cannot, and shares His victory with us as a gift. This is why salvation is always by grace, not by works. Our identity is not something we achieve but something we receive: we are God’s beloved children, adopted through Christ into His eternal family.

Through repentance and faith, turning toward Christ and trusting Him, we step into this reality. Repentance is not primarily about moral effort but about relationship: reorienting our hearts to Jesus and allowing Him to transform us one step at a time. And in the meantime, the Holy Spirit has been poured into our hearts, filling us with God’s love and empowering us to live in hope until the kingdom comes in full.

Theological Insight :

The sermon reminded us that grace is not simply an idea, a substance, or a moment of pardon. Grace is God Himself revealed in Jesus Christ. This truth is echoed by theologians across time.

Karl Rahner wrote:

“Incarnation and grace appear as technical terms to describe the central message of the Gospel: God has communicated Himself. The event of Jesus Christ is … the center-point of the self-communication of God. … grace is not something other than God … but God Himself.”

“Grace is not a thing. Grace is not stuff that God gives us apart from himself. He doesn’t run out of it. God gives us himself when we don’t deserve it; that is grace.”
— The Gospel Coalition

Together, these voices remind us that the heart of the gospel is relational — God giving Himself to us in love, in Jesus Christ, by the Spirit.

Key Themes and Reflection Questions:

  1. The Gospel is God Himself ✝️🔥
    • Theme: The good news is not just information, but God Himself revealed in Jesus Christ. God came as man so that we could truly know Him, receive Him, and live in relationship with Him.
    • Discipleship Question: How does remembering that the gospel is not a concept but a person (Jesus) change the way you approach your faith?
    • #GodIsTheGospel
  2. Grace is a Person: Jesus Christ 🙌💖
    • Theme: Grace is not simply God overlooking our sins, it is Jesus Himself, reconciling us to the Father through His life, death, resurrection, and ongoing intercession.
    • Discipleship Question: In what ways can you shift your understanding of grace from an abstract gift to a living relationship with Jesus this week?
    • #GraceInChrist
  3. Adopted Into God’s Family 👨‍👩‍👧‍👦✨
    • Theme: From before creation, God’s plan was to adopt us as His beloved children through Christ. Our worth and belonging rest in His choice, not our works.
    • Discipleship Question: What would it look like for you to live more confidently as God’s adopted son or daughter today?
    • #ChildOfGod
  4. The Cross and Resurrection Bring True Life 🌅✝️
    • Theme: Jesus’ perfect obedience and sacrifice destroyed sin and death, while His resurrection restores humanity to life with God.
    • Discipleship Question: How can you embrace resurrection hope when you face discouragement or brokenness this week?
    • #ResurrectionHope
  5. Repentance as Relationship 🔄❤️
    • Theme: Repentance is not just about behavior change but about turning toward Jesus, entering into deeper trust, and allowing Him to transform us step by step.
    • Discipleship Question: What is one practical way you can turn your heart more fully toward Jesus in relationship today?
    • #TurnToJesus
  6. Life in the Spirit 🕊️🔥
    • Theme: The Holy Spirit fills our hearts with God’s love, enabling us to live with hope, faith, and love while awaiting the fullness of God’s kingdom.
    • Discipleship Question: Where in your daily life do you need to rely more fully on the Spirit’s presence and power?
    • #SpiritLedLiving

Reflective Moment: 

This sermon was a powerful reminder to us that our faith is not about striving harder but about resting deeper in Christ. The Father has already chosen us, Jesus has already lived and died for us, and the Spirit has already been poured into our hearts. Our only response is to receive, to trust, and to walk in relationship with God – Father, Son and Holy Spirit.

Take a moment this week to pause and simply say: “Thank You, Lord, that I am already loved, already adopted, already included in Your family through Christ.” From that place of assurance, let every action, whether at work, home, or church flow out of gratitude and joy.

“A Son Builds The Temple!”

Part A:

Part B:

Full Message:


Scripture: 1 Kings 8: 10-61


Summary:

In this sermon, Pastor Richard Andrews reflects on the high point of Solomon’s reign: the construction of the Lord’s temple (1 Kings 6–8). The temple was more than a building, it was the visible fulfillment of God’s covenant promises to Abraham and David, a sign of His faithfulness, and a testimony that “the Lord is God.” God vowed to dwell among His people, making Jerusalem the center of worship while pointing forward to Christ as the true temple.

Solomon’s reign of peace and prosperity enabled him to complete this crowning achievement, establishing not only Israel’s defenses and economy but also a permanent dwelling place for God’s glory. At its dedication, God’s presence filled the temple in a cloud so overwhelming that the priests could not continue ministering (1 Kings 8). This affirmed God’s covenant faithfulness, His nearness, and His mission to make His name known among the nations.

Yet the temple ultimately pointed beyond itself. Jesus identified Himself as God’s temple, embodying His presence, fulfilling His promises, and extending His mission to the world. Through His life, death, and resurrection, believers are now the temple of the Holy Spirit, living testimonies of God’s dwelling on earth. Just as Solomon’s temple declared God’s faithfulness, so today the church exists as His living temple, called to reflect His presence in word and deed so that the nations may know He is Lord.

“The place of God’s glorious dwelling is not to be found in an ornate temple of marble, gold, and precious stones, but rather in Jesus. The place of God’s glorious dwelling is the flesh of his Son!”— Sam Storms

Key Points and Highlights

  1. The Temple: God’s Presence With His People 🏛️✨
  • Theme: The temple visibly displayed God’s glory and affirmed His desire to dwell with His people.
  • Discipleship Question: How can you live more aware of God’s nearness in daily life?
  • #GodWithUs
  1. God’s Covenant Faithfulness 📜✅
  • Theme: The temple fulfilled God’s promises to Abraham and David, proving that His word never fails.
  • Discipleship Question: Which promise of God do you need to hold onto more tightly this week?
  • #FaithfulGod
  1. Jesus, the True Temple ✝️🔥
  • Theme: Jesus embodied God’s presence and fulfilled the temple’s purpose, becoming the true center of worship.
  • Discipleship Question: How can you keep Christ, not self or tradition, at the center of your worship?
  • #JesusIsTheTemple
  1. Believers as God’s Living Temple 🙌🕊️
  • Theme: Through the Spirit, God dwells in His people, making our lives sacred spaces that reflect His glory.
  • Discipleship Question: How can you honor God’s presence in your body, words, and actions this week?
  • #TempleOfTheHolySpirit
  1. The Mission: Making God Known 🌍📢
  • Theme: Just as the temple testified that the Lord is God, the church now carries that mission through word and deed.
  • Discipleship Question: Who in your life needs to see and hear through you that Jesus is Lord?
  • #MakeGodKnown

“One cannot pass without interruption from Christ to the Church. The Cross stands between. In being the Body of Christ, the Church meets her Lord; she does not prolong Him, but she expresses Him here and now. She does not replace Him, but makes Him visible, demonstrates Him without being confounded with Him.”— Thomas F. Torrance

Reflective Moment:
As Solomon’s temple declared God’s presence and faithfulness, our lives as the temple of the Holy Spirit are meant to do the same today. The world is not looking for perfection but for evidence of God’s presence at work within us. Reflect: in your words, actions, and relationships, what story are you telling about God-Father, Son and Holy Spirit? May we live as temples of His Spirit, carrying His presence into our homes, workplaces, and communities so that others may see and know the Lord is God.