Archive for the ‘Witness’ Category

“Remembering What Is Often Forgotten About Pentecost (TRINITY)!”

Part A:

Part B:

Full Message:


Scripture: Acts 2, Matthew 28: 19-20, 1 Corinthians 12: 4-6, 2 Corinthians 13:14 John 14


Summary:

In this insightful and foundational sermon, Pastor Timothy Brassell challenges us to move beyond a fragmented view of God that emphasizes one Person of the Trinity over the others. Instead, he calls us to embrace the full relational unity of the Triune God—Father, Son, and Holy Spirit in our worship, discipleship, and daily life.

Drawing from Acts 2, John 14, and the Nicene Creed, Pastor Tim calls the Church back to honoring God as Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, indivisible and fully unified. He reminds us that Pentecost is not merely about the Holy Spirit’s arrival; it’s about encountering the whole God in unified action. When we divide the Trinity, we distort the gospel and hinder our spiritual growth. But when we hold the Persons of God together, we see clearly, live rightly, and worship fully. This is a call to deeper reverence, relational intimacy, and Christ-centered living empowered by the Spirit.

Key Themes & Highlights:

1. The Trinity in Full Unity 🔺💞

  • Theme: The Church often emphasizes one Person of the Trinity over the others, but true worship involves knowing and honoring God as Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, united not divided.
  • Discipleship Question: Are you growing in relationship with the whole Triune God, not just a “part” of Him? Are you remembering that He doesn’t come in parts but in Whole?
  • #WholeGodWorship

2. The Forgotten Side of Pentecost 🔥🔄

  • Theme: Pentecost is more than the Holy Spirit’s outpouring; it’s an encounter with the entire Trinity, working in love and mission.
  • Discipleship Question: How can you celebrate the full presence of the Trinity in your spiritual life this week?
  • #TrinitarianPentecost

3. God Revealed Through Relationship 👨‍👦‍👦💬

  • Theme: God reveals Himself through the relationship of Father, Son, and Holy Spirit—not abstract doctrines, but living, loving Persons.
  • Discipleship Question: How does viewing God as relational impact the way you relate to others?
  • #GodIsRelationship

4. True Doctrine is Like Glasses 🤓📖

  • Theme: Sound doctrine isn’t just theology; it’s a gift from God to help our broken minds see Him more clearly, like corrective lenses.
  • Discipleship Question: Are you viewing doctrine as a tool for clarity or as a burden?
  • #DoctrineAsGlasses

5. God Is Not Distant—He’s Hidden for Our Good 🌫️❤️

  • Theme: God’s hiddenness (especially through the Holy Spirit) is intentional. It protects our free will and invites pursuit.
  • Discipleship Question: How can you respond with trust even when God seems silent?
  • #HiddenButPresent

6. Worship the One, Not Just the Parts 🙌💠

  • Theme: Dividing God into Father-only, Jesus-only, or Spirit-only leads to spiritual confusion. Worship must be holistic.
  • Discipleship Question: In what ways can your worship better reflect the unity of the Trinity?
  • #UndividedGod

7. The Holy Spirit Always Points to the Son and Father 🕊️➡️👑

  • Theme: The Spirit doesn’t draw attention to Himself. He glorifies Jesus and leads us to the Father.
  • Discipleship Question: Are your spiritual experiences drawing you deeper into relationship with Jesus and the Father in the Holy Spirit?
  • #SpiritLeadsToChrist

8. The Trinity Teaches Us to Hold Things Together 🧩🫂

  • Theme: Just as God’s nature is united in three persons, we are called to unity, not division, in doctrine, worship, and life.
  • Discipleship Question: What part of your life needs the integrative healing of the Triune God?
  • #HoldItTogetherInChrist

9. Baptism and Salvation Are Trinitarian Acts 💧✝️

  • Theme: Baptism in the name of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit reflects that salvation is the shared mission of the Triune God.
  • Discipleship Question: How can you live as someone who’s been baptized into the fullness of God?
  • #TrinitarianBaptism

10. God Is Always Working—even in Chaos 🌍🔧

  • Theme: The Father, Son, and Holy Spirit are actively involved in redeeming the world, even when it seems chaotic.
  • Discipleship Question: Where can you discern the presence of God working in the brokenness around you?
  • #GodInTheMess

Context:

In a time when many churches tend to highlight the Father’s authority, the Son’s grace, or the Spirit’s power in isolation, this message calls us back to the wholeness of who God truly is. Pentecost is often reduced to a celebration of the Holy Spirit alone; but what if we’ve forgotten something essential?

Pastor Tim leads us into a richer understanding of Pentecost as a revelation of the entire Triune God. Through Acts 2 and the Nicene Creed, he urges the Church to honor God as Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, indivisible and fully unified, working together to redeem creation and empower His people.

Reflective Moment:

✨ What part of your faith practice has become one-dimensional?
✨ Are you embracing God as Father, Son, and Spirit or just the “parts” you’re most comfortable with? ✨ Where can you discern the presence of God working in the brokenness around you?

This message emphasizes reverencesound doctrinespiritual maturity, and a return to a fully Trinitarian gospel. Let it lead you into deeper worshipclearer understanding, and a renewed desire to live in step with the fullness of God.

📖 Rediscover Pentecost through a Trinitarian lens.
💬 Reflect. Repent. Receive the fullness of God.

“Remembering What Is Often Forgotten About Pentecost (JESUS)!”

Part A:

Part B:

Full Message:


Scripture: Acts 2


Summary:

In this Pentecost message, Pastor Timothy Brassell launches a new series in the Book of Acts, emphasizing the foundational Gospel truth that Jesus Christ is the main point—even at Pentecost. With bold theological clarity and relational depth, Pastor Tim challenges the Church to rethink how we read Scripture and experience the Holy Spirit. He reminds us that Scripture is not self-interpreting, it must be read through Christ, by the Spirit, in relationship with the Triune God. The Church is urged to return to Jesus as the lens, center, and life of all understanding, especially when reflecting on Pentecost.

1. You Can’t Understand God Without God:
Theme: Relationship is the only way to truly know God. Pentecost is about divine relationship, not isolated knowledge.

“You can’t understand a thing about God apart from a relationship with God, in Christ, by the Spirit.”
Discipleship Question: Am I approaching Scripture as relationship with Jesus or merely information about God?
#KnowThroughChrist #RelationalRevelation #GodWithUs

2. Jesus Is the Real Text of Scripture:
Theme: Jesus is the living Word. Scripture points to Him and is interpreted through Him. “Jesus is the real text of Scripture. He is the one true Word of God, ahead of Scripture but not apart from it.”
Discipleship Question: Is my reading of the Bible centered on Jesus as the true Word?
#ChristTheText #ScriptureThroughJesus #LivingWord

3. Misreading Happens When We Miss Jesus:
Theme: When Jesus isn’t the focus, interpretation distorts and distractions multiply.

“When we forget Jesus as the main point, we also misread and get caught up in other distracting points.”
Discipleship Question: What theological or cultural side issues have taken my focus off Jesus?
#KeepJesusCentral #ChristAboveAll #ScripturalClarity

4. Pentecost Reveals Christ, Not Just Power:
Theme: The Holy Spirit doesn’t point to Himself, He reveals Jesus and enables us to know Him deeply.

“The Holy Spirit comes not to reveal Himself, but to reveal Jesus and share what He knows.”
Discipleship Question: Is my experience of the Spirit drawing me to Christ or just seeking phenomena?
#SpiritOfChrist #PentecostRevisited #JesusIsThePoint

5. The Spirit Works in Light, Not Force:
Theme: God’s — Father, Son, Holy Spirit—power is expressed through light, subtle, relational, patient transformation, not coercion.

“God is light… and works in a light way so that you can actually participate.”
Discipleship Question: Am I looking for God in loud power or in the quiet light of His presence?
#PowerInLight #DivineGentleness #HolySpiritMovesSoftly

6. Scripture Must Be Breathed Anew Each Time:
Theme: The Scriptures don’t have “stored magic”, they require the Spirit’s fresh breath each reading.

“You aren’t hearing from the Lord unless the living Lord is actually speaking at the time you’re reading.”
Discipleship Question: Do I begin my Bible reading with a prayerful dependence on the Spirit?
#LivingBreath #NotMagicWords #SpiritInspiredReading

7. Start With Relationship, Not Rules:
Theme: Before any theological understanding or practice, relationship with the Triune God must come first.

“You must be relating to the Father, through the Son, by the Spirit, or else you can’t understand a Godly thing.”
Discipleship Question: What are my “first things” when I approach faith?
#FirstThingsFirst #GodBeforeDoctrine #RelateThenUnderstand

8. Communion Affirms Christ’s Judgment Over Us:
Theme: Taking Communion is embracing Christ’s verdict: you are loved, forgiven, and included.

“You are judged right now in Christ as no sinner… holy and blameless before the Lord.”
Discipleship Question: Do I receive the Lord’s Supper as performance or as grace freely given?
#JudgedInChrist #GraceAtTheTable #CommunionWithChrist

9. The Spirit Testifies. We Must Too:
Theme: Just as the Spirit testifies to Jesus, so must the Church boldly bear witness to Him alone.

“You will receive power… and you will testify about Jesus.”
Discipleship Question: Who is the focus of my witness—Jesus or spiritual activity?
#WitnessToJesus #SpiritLedMission #GospelFocus

10. Pentecost Is About Remembering Jesus:
Theme: The Day of Pentecost is not first about gifts or experiences, it’s about remembering Jesus Christ.

“This series is about remembering what is often forgotten about Pentecost: Jesus!”
Discipleship Question: Have I let secondary things cloud the central revelation of Christ?
#JesusOfPentecost #ForgottenNoMore #ChristOurCenter


Context:
This message is the first in a Pentecost-focused series out of Acts 2, aimed at correcting widespread misreadings and misunderstandings about the Holy Spirit and the role of Scripture. Pastor Tim roots the teaching in Trinitarian theologyChrist-centered interpretation, and the call to discipleship that begins with love, not legalism. The Spirit’s power, he reminds us, is light, not spectacle, and it is Jesus who remains the heart of Pentecost, Scripture, and Church life.


Reflective Moment: Jesus—The True Word of Pentecost:
Take a moment and ask:
Am I approaching Scripture to meet Jesus or merely to gather facts? Have I subtly replaced Christ with concepts, even spiritual ones? What would it look like for me to receive the Holy Spirit as the Spirit of Jesus, leading me deeper into His life and mission? Let the Word read you as you read it. Come not to conquer Scripture, but to be transformed by the Living Word—Jesus Christ.

“Living In The Divine Dance: The God Who Includes You”

From the beginning, we were made for communion. Not for striving or performing on our own strengths, or standing at arm’s length from God but to be drawn into the eternal joy shared between Father, Son, and Spirit. This isn’t abstract theology. It’s the dance we were born to join.

“The grace of the Lord Jesus Christ, and the love of God, and the fellowship of the Holy Spirit be with you all.”
— 2 Corinthians 13:14

As Trinity Sunday approaches, we’re reminded that Christianity is not just about following rules or imitating Christ. It’s about being included in a relationship so deep, so eternal, that it reshapes how we see ourselves, each other, and the world. We are invited to stand in awe of the mystery and majesty of God-Father-Son-Holy Spirit; one God in three Persons. As Jesus commands in Matthew 28:19:

“Go therefore and make disciples of all Nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit.”
This isn’t just a ritual. It’s a revelation. An invitation into God’s own life.

T. F. Torrance writes, “God draws near to us in such a way as to draw us near to Himself within the circle of His knowing of Himself.”
God is not distant. He is relational. He is love and through Jesus Christ, He brings us near.
“God loves you so utterly and completely,” Torrance continues, “that He has given himself for you in Jesus Christ His beloved Son… He cannot go back upon it without undoing the Incarnation and the Cross.”
Our inclusion in God’s life is not temporary or fragile. It’s secured in who God is and through the Holy Spirit, we are not left on the outside. We are brought inside the fellowship of God Himself.

Gary Deddo explains:

“Through the ministry of the Holy Spirit, [Jesus] gives us a share in His meaning, significance, security…”
We are not just followers—we are participants.
We are not just observers—we are included.

Jesus Himself prayed:

“May they all be one, as you, Father, are in me and I am in you. May they also be in us, so that the world may believe you sent me.” — John 17:21
In Christ, we are welcomed into the very oneness Jesus shares with the Father. A unity brought alive by the Spirit.

Gary Deddo deepens this vision:

“This is the trinitarian life. We are given to share in this life—in the Spirit (which is Jesus’ Spirit)—sharing Jesus’ own joy, life, righteousness, peace, work, evangelism…”
In Christ, we don’t just work for God. We work WITH Him.
“Ministry is going with Jesus—doing what he is doing, going where he is going; sharing obediently in His ministry… Obedience and fellowship are one and the same thing.”

When we lose sight of this, ministry becomes a burden. We chase effectiveness, compare our outcomes, trust in our techniques. But Gary Deddo reminds us:

“It’s not our ministry—it’s Christ’s ministry. Jesus continues to minister by His Spirit… Sometimes we’re tempted to trust in our own loaves and fishes—programs, techniques, even our theology. But just give it to Him and let Him use it. Focus on sharing in Christ’s continuing ministry.”

Jesus doesn’t just reveal the message of God, He is the message, the center, and the way into the life of the Trinity and by the Spirit, He leads us to the Father and holds us in the communion we were made for.

So, take a breath. Let your soul rest in this truth: You are not alone. You are not forgotten. You are known, loved, and invited into the divine dance of GOD-Father, Son, and Spirit.

Reflection:

This Trinity Sunday, let us reflect on how profoundly we are known and loved. Be awakened to the wonder of being included in the life of the Triune God. God dwells in unity and through Christ and the Spirit, He welcomes us into His life. As T. F. Torrance says, step into “the circle of His knowing.”  Your soul isn’t alone. It’s wrapped in the eternal fellowship of the Trinity. As Gary Deddo teaches, we are invited to share in Christ’s joy, peace, and ministry through the Spirit. And as Scripture declares:

“The grace of the Lord Jesus Christ, and the love of God, and the fellowship of the Holy Spirit be with you all.”
— 2 Corinthians 13:14

Prayer:

Triune God—Father, Son, and Holy Spirit—You are one God in perfect communion. Your love transcends time and space. In You, I find belonging. In Christ, I find redemption. In Your Spirit, I find life. On this Trinity Sunday and always, remind us how deeply we are known and loved. You dwell in unity, and through Christ and the Spirit, you welcome us into Your life. Our souls are not alone; they are held in the eternal fellowship of Your love. Guide me today as I walk in the shadow of Your presence. Let my life reflect the dance You have drawn me into; one of joy, peace, purpose, and shared ministry. Amen.


Selected quotes from:
Gary Deddo, Clarifying Our Theological Vision, — Parts 1–5 Grace Communion International – 2013–2015Published on GCI.org

Selected quotes from:
T.F. Torrance, The Christian Doctrine of God: One Being Three Persons (T&T Clark, 2001) and The Mediation of Christ(Helmers & Howard, 1992)

“6 Ways Of Understanding God’s Gracious Judgement!”

Part A:

Part B:

Full Message:


Scripture: Revelation 2-3; Revelation 1: 4-20


Summary:

In this theologically rich Ascension Sunday message, Pastor Timothy Brassell unveils Jesus Christ not only as Savior but as God’s active, relational, and loving judgment. Drawing deeply from Scripture and lived experience, he explores six “ways” of understanding God’s judgment in Christ, each centering on the truth that God-Father, Son, Holy Spirit is for us, not against us. Rather than punishment, judgment is presented as intimate correction, grace-filled disruption, and a call to deeper relationship with the Triune God. Pastor Tim calls the Church to repentance, trust, mission, and communion in light of Jesus’s ongoing presence in and with all creation.

Key Points and Highlights:

1. Jesus Is God’s Judgment of Love

Theme: Jesus reveals God’s judgment as a relational act of redeeming, not condemnation.
Quote: “God’s judgment in Christ is: ‘I am for you.’”
Discipleship Question: Do I truly believe God is for me, even when I face hardship or correction?
#JesusIsForYou #JudgmentAsLove #GodIsForUs

🛐 2. We Mourn With Hope

Theme: In Christ, grief is transformed by hope because judgment has already been dealt with at the cross.
Quote: “We mourn, but not as those without hope.”
Discipleship Question: How can I grieve and still anchor my hope in the victory of Christ?
#HopeInGrief #JesusHasOvercome #GrieveWithGrace

💥 3. Judgment Is Intimate, Not Distant

Theme: Jesus’s judgment is relational. He draws near to correct because He desires deeper intimacy.
Quote: “Jesus is seeking to be more intimate with you… that’s why He gets in your face.”
Discipleship Question: What obstacles am I clinging to that keep me from intimacy with Christ?
#CloserThanYouThink #IntimateGod #FaceToFaceFaith

⛪ 4. The Church Is a Reminder of Truth

Theme: Christ uses the Church, not to shame, but to remind us who we are in Him.
Quote: “Gather with others to remind each other what’s true.”
Discipleship Question: How is community shaping my understanding of who I am in Christ?
#ChurchAsReminder #GospelCommunity #GraceTogether

🚫 5. God Judges Our False Idols

Theme: God opposes the thoughts and behaviors that distort our identity and keep us from Him.
Quote: “God is against you, when you are against yourself.”
Discipleship Question: What lies am I believing that God may be disrupting for my healing?
#DisruptToHeal #JudgedToBeFree #BreakTheIdols

🌍 6. Judgment Is Always Missional

Theme: God’s judgment extends outward through creation and especially through humanity. It is never self-centered.
Quote: “Salvation is never just for you. It’s always for the other, too.”
Discipleship Question: Is my faith focused inward, or is it driving me outward toward others?
#MissionMinded #ForTheOther #OutwardFaith

🔥 7. God’s Disruption Is Grace

Theme: Sometimes God’s love comes in the form of disruption because His will is to draw us close.
Quote: “He’ll kick your legs out from under you if it will wake you up to His love.”
Discipleship Question: Am I recognizing God’s loving interruptions in my life?
#GracefulDisruption #WokenByLove #GodGetsMyAttention

🕊️ 8. The Spirit Makes God’s Judgment Believable

Theme: Only the Holy Spirit allows us to receive and trust that God’s judgment is for our good.
Quote: “You can’t receive that truth without the Holy Spirit.”
Discipleship Question: Am I listening to the Spirit or to my circumstances?
#LedByTheSpirit #BelieveByGrace #SpiritOfTruth

📖 9. Scripture and Prayer Are Participation

Theme: Reading the Word, gathering with believers, and praying are how we align with God’s relational judgment.
Quote: “Prayer isn’t a religious checklist. It’s how you survive as a living person.”
Discipleship Question: Am I relating with the Relational God, or checking religious boxes?
#PrayToLive #ScriptureIsLife #RelationalFaith

🍞 10. Communion Is Receiving the Judge Who Saves

Theme: The Eucharist is not a ritual. It’s a real participation in Christ’s glorified life.
Quote: “This is participation with Him in His ascended life.”
Discipleship Question: Am I receiving Christ in communion as a living relationship or as tradition?
#RealPresence #CommunionAsLife #ReceiveJesusFully

Context:

This message was delivered on Ascension Sunday and serves as a theological meditation on what it means that Jesus Christ is both Lord and Judge. Rather than presenting judgment as divine wrath or rejection, Pastor Tim reorients our understanding of judgment to be about God’s relentless pursuit of relationship, holiness, healing, and hope. The sermon touches on themes of grief, correction, community, creation, mission, and communion, all through the lens of Christ as the relational Judge who is present, active, and victorious.

Reflective Moment: Come Closer

Take a quiet moment to ask:
Am I letting Jesus be near enough to correct me because He loves me?
Am I resisting the very disruptions that are meant to restore me?
Have I made salvation about me alone, or am I joining God’s mission for others?

Come as you are. God’s judgment is not a hammer. It’s a hand extended in love.

“Sent to Share – Living the Resurrection Now!”

Devotional By Pastor Timothy Brassell

Scripture: “Peace be with you. As the Father has sent me, I also send you.”
John 20:21 (CSB)

Today’s Reflection:

In the quiet after the resurrection, Jesus didn’t come with fire from heaven, but with something even more powerful: peace and purpose.

“Peace be with you. As the Father has sent me, so I send you.”

These are not just words for the disciples; they are words for us. The resurrection isn’t only a celebration of the past or a promise of the future. It’s a living reality that changes how we walk through each moment of each ordinary day. We’re not just receivers of grace; we’re sharers of it. As we live sent lives, we don’t go alone; we go for and with each other

“The Christian needs another Christian who speaks God’s Word to him… again and again when he becomes uncertain and discouraged.”
— Dietrich Bonhoeffer

Sharing grace isn’t always dramatic, it’s often quiet, relational, and consistent. God sends us to speak encouragement, truth, and hope into one another’s lives, especially when faith feels uncertain.

Mary Magdalene was told not to cling to the risen Jesus, but to go and tell. That same divine pattern lives in you. Even your “boring days” are holy ground when you live under Christ’s reign.

“Your day has purpose. Jesus is walking with you on your boring days.”

And the great comfort is this: “The urgency is on, but the pressure is off.”
God-Father-Son-Holy Spirit, sends you, but it’s not on your shoulders. It’s His Spirit working through you that does the heavy lifting.

God and Evil Are Not Equals:

One of the most profound truths is this: Evil is not eternal, and evil is not God’s equal.

“Evil doesn’t sit beside God as an equal force; it’s a distortion; a twist in creation that God is straightening out in Jesus.”

There is no cosmic tug-of-war. There is only one Sovereign God, and in Christ, evil has been decisively defeated. It’s not a matter of if, but when it will be gone forever. Evil may have twisted creation, but in Jesus, God-Father-Son Holy Spirit, is redeeming what He made, not replacing it. Our bodies, our relationships, our time, all of it is being redeemed and we’re called to participate in that straightening work, not by power, but by presence, prayer, and proclamation.

“The resurrection is not the reversal of a process but its completion. It is not the denial of the cross, but its vindication.”
— Lesslie NewbiginTruth to Tell, p. 45

Living on God’s Calendar:

When you live under God’s calendar, nothing is wasted. That means when you’re doing dishes, struggling through studies, or enduring pain Jesus is there. The time you once saw as pointless is now sacred. You’re not waiting for heaven to begin resurrection life. You’re already living in it.

You are a dual citizen, walking in this world while belonging to the next. That’s why your habits, priorities, and even relationships begin to shift. You’re not just reacting to life anymore; you’re living sent with purpose.

“You can live slower and stronger now under the calendar of Jesus Christ.”

Just as the Father sent Jesus into a broken world to redeem it, He now sends you into your family, your neighborhood, your job, your daily routines to participate in that same redemptive work. We live between resurrection and return. In this in-between time, we are not passive. We are active participants in God’s Kingdom mission.

“Our sole future is that He will come, just as our sole present is that He has come.”
— Karl BarthDogmatics in Outline

This quote reminds us that we don’t just look forward; we live fully in the now. The resurrection isn’t an interruption to history; it’s the anchor of it. Christ has come. Christ is coming. And in the middle, we live sent.

Reflective Moment:

Take a breath. Sit with these questions:

  • What has Jesus taught me lately?
  • Am I clinging to safety… or stepping out in faith?
  • Who around me needs to know that evil doesn’t win?

Let the Spirit place someone or something on your heart. Then move toward them with love, light, and truth. Today, take what you’ve learned, big or small and share it. Write it. Speak it. Text it. Live it. You don’t need to be perfect; just present. You’re not sent because you’re strong; you’re sent because Jesus is risen, and He lives in you.

Prayer: 

Lord Jesus, You are the resurrection and the life. You’ve not only called me to Yourself ; You’ve sent me into the world You are redeeming. I confess the times I’ve retreated into fear or comfort when You were calling me to share. Help me live in the truth that evil is already defeated, and that time is not my enemy; it’s Your tool. Let my moments be filled with eternity. Fill me with peace. Move me in power. Let me live and love as someone sent. In Your victorious name I pray, Amen.

Commissioning:

Now go; loved, empowered, and sent by the risen Christ. Live sent.

“Hear What Jesus Says To You, His Church!” Pt3

Part 3A:

Part 3B:

Full Message:


Scripture: Revelation 2 – 3


Summary:

In this sermon, Pastor Timothy Brassell continues his series on Revelation 2–3, highlighting Jesus Christ as both gracious Judge and faithful Redeemer of His Church. With theological depth and pastoral clarity, Pastor Tim paints a vivid picture of the Church not as a place of perfection, but as a “glorious mess” where God’s love, truth, and judgment meet human frailty. He emphasizes that divine judgment is an act of grace meant to purify and guide, not condemn. Listeners are called to repentance, wholehearted participation in Christ’s mission, and enduring faithfulness through tribulation. The message challenges cultural distortions of Christianity and calls the Church to live out unity, holiness, and hope in the midst of a broken world.

🔥 1. Christ the Loving and Gracious Judge

Theme: Jesus’s role as Judge is not to destroy but to restore. His judgment reveals truth, heals brokenness, and calls us into transformation through love.
“If this Father, Son, Holy Spirit God is not your judge, how shall you be guided?”
Discipleship Question: Do I welcome Christ’s judgment as a pathway to growth or avoid it out of fear?
#JesusTheGoodJudge #GraceFilledCorrection #LoveThatLeads

⛪ 2. The Church is a Glorious Mess

Theme: The Church is both holy and broken, yet it is through our mess that God reveals His glory and shapes us into Christ’s likeness.
“The problem is not that you are a mess but that you’re not always being a glorious mess.”
Discipleship Question: How does embracing my mess draw me deeper into grace and community?
#GloriousMess #ChurchWithoutFilters #GodUsesBrokenVessels

📖 3. Revelation as Comfort, Not Condemnation

Theme: Revelation 2–3 offers grace-filled correction and hope. Jesus begins every message with who He is, reminding us that grace always comes before instruction.
“These letters are not threats, they’re invitations to relationship.”
Discipleship Question: Am I reading Revelation with fear or as a loving call to align with Christ?
#RevelationOfHope #LettersFromJesus #ScriptureThatRestores

🌍 4. Unity in Christ, Not Division by Preference

Theme: The Church is one body across cultures, styles, and denominations. Our unity is found in Christ, not personal preferences.
“We are divided over preferences, not the Lordship of Christ and that’s a problem.”
Discipleship Question: What biases or preferences keep me from unity with the wider Church?
#OneChurchOneBody #ChristIsOurUnity #BeyondDenominations

🔥 5. Be Fire Lighters, Not Firefighters

Theme: The Church is not called to merely respond to social crises but to light gospel fires that transform hearts and communities.
“We’re not here just to put out fires but to start holy ones.”
Discipleship Question: Am I advancing the gospel actively or only reacting to the world’s chaos?
#LightTheFire #GospelInAction #KingdomCatalyst

🔓 6. Grace That Frees Us to Obey

Theme: Grace doesn’t eliminate obedience it fuels it. True freedom in Christ leads to joyful submission, not lawless living.
“Having been set free from sin, you became slaves of righteousness.” (Romans 6:18)
Discipleship Question: How is God’s grace empowering me to walk in holiness today?
#GraceEmpowersObedience #FreedomInChrist #HolyLivingMadePossible

⛈️ 7. Tribulation is the Church’s Refining Fire

Theme: Trials do not defeat the Church, they refine her. Suffering, when endured with Christ, brings purification and power.
“The truer the Church is to the cross, the more she will suffer.”
Discipleship Question: Am I resisting tribulation or being shaped by it into Christ’s image?
#RefinedInFire #SufferingWithPurpose #StrengthThroughStruggle

🍞 8. Communion is Participation, Not Performance

Theme: The Lord’s Supper is not a reward for the righteous, but a reminder to receive Christ’s life freely and faithfully.
“You are righteous… even while you are still a mess.”
Discipleship Question: Am I coming to the table to perform or to receive the grace I need?
#ReceiveJesus #GraceAtTheTable #CommunionNotChecklist

🏠 9. The Church is God’s Family, Not a Social Club

Theme: Church is where God forms His children through shared life, discipline, worship, and love. It’s not optional, it’s home.
“If you don’t have the Church as your mother, you don’t have God as your Father.”
Discipleship Question: Am I truly planted and growing in the spiritual home God has given me?
#ChurchIsHome #SpiritualFamily #NurturedInChristTogether

💖 10. God Not Only Loves You—He Likes You

Theme: God’s affection is personal, joyful, and real. He doesn’t just put up with us, He takes delight in us.
“God not only loves you more than He loves Himself, He actually likes you.”
Discipleship Question: Do I believe God delights in me right now, even in my weakness?
#GodLikesYouToo #DelightedInChrist #BelovedAndChosen

Context:

This message builds upon previous sermons in a series on Revelation, focusing particularly on chapters 2 and 3. It challenges the Church to hear what the Spirit is saying, not merely in doctrinal understanding but in transformative discipleship and mission. Through illustrations and rich biblical exposition, Pastor Tim situates the modern Church in the ongoing narrative of God’s redemptive work in history. His message centers on the invitation to endure, repent, and live boldly in union with Christ, even amid weakness and tribulation.

🌿 Reflective Moment: A Glorious Invitation

Take a moment to ask:
Am I allowing Jesus, the One who was judged in my place, to lovingly judge and restore me? Or am I hiding from the very grace that wants to heal me? What part of my life is Jesus standing in the midst of, not demanding perfection, but inviting participation in His life? Can I hear the voice of the One who disciplines not to shame, but to redeem?  Come as you are, a glorious mess. Let the One who loves you more than Himself make you whole again.

“Who Do You Say I Am, God?”

Rediscovering Your True Identity in Christ

Galatians 2:20 (KJV)
“I am crucified with Christ: nevertheless, I live; yet not I, but Christ liveth in me: and the life which I now live in the flesh I live by the faith of the Son of God, who loved me, and gave himself for me.”

“I will praise you because I have been remarkably and wondrously made. Your works are wondrous, and I know this very well.” Psalm 139:14(CSB)

I don’t know about you, but I’ve wrestled with labels: failure, too broken, unlovable, not enough, invisible, unworthy, making life heavy. Maybe you have too. Sometimes the world whispers them. Sometimes they’re shouted by our circumstances. Sometimes we carry them quietly from our past. And other times, they come like daggers from the very people we thought would love and protect us most. Over time, those words start to settle in, clinging to us like heavy blankets, distorting how we see ourselves, and even how we think God —Father, Son, Holy Spirit sees us.

But the deeper, more healing question is this:
“Who do You say I am, God?”

This question isn’t just self-reflection, it’s surrender. It’s turning away from the unstable ground of human opinion and personal shame and turning toward the One whose voice created us in love and speaks identity over us in grace.
Jesus asked His disciples, “But you,” he asked them, “who do you say that I am?” (Matthew 16:15, CSB).
Simon Peter answered, “You are the Messiah, the Son of the living God.” (v. 16)
Jesus responded, “Blessed are you, Simon son of Jonah, because flesh and blood did not reveal this to you, but my Father in heaven.” (v. 17)

This moment is about revelation. It shows that truly knowing who Jesus is and who we are in Him is not something we achieve through striving or self-discovery, but something revealed to us by the Father. Just as Peter saw Jesus clearly by God’s grace, we too come to see ourselves rightly through that same grace.

And here’s what God—Father, Son, Holy Spirit says:
You are My beloved child (John 1:12, CSB).
You are forgiven and free (Romans 8:1–2, CSB).
You are a new creation (2 Corinthians 5:17, CSB).
You are chosen and not forsaken (1 Peter 2:9, CSB).
You are hidden with Christ in God (Colossians 3:3, CSB).
You are seated with Christ in the heavens (Ephesians 2:6, CSB).

When God names us, He does so based NOT on what we’ve done, but on what JESUS HAS DONE. As Dr. Gary Deddo writes:
“Jesus alone tells us who we are in him. Through the ministry of the Holy Spirit, he gives us a share in his meaning, significance, security, dignity and destiny.”Gary Deddo, The Surprising God Blog
This is the truest thing about you:
You are not who others say you are. You are not the sum of your mistakes. You are not even who you say you are. You were designed with a purpose. You were made for a destiny. You are a masterpiece, hand painted by the Master himself. You are Who God Says You Are! “For we are his workmanship, created in Christ Jesus for good works, which God prepared ahead of time for us to do.” —Ephesians 2:10 CSB).

That identity is not fragile. It’s not temporary. It doesn’t rise and fall with your performance. In another reflection, Dr. Deddo reminds us:
“Let us not forget that it is Jesus’ faith—his faithfulness—that saves and transforms us.”Gary Deddo, GCI Update, “Embracing Our New Identity in Christ”
This changes everything. We don’t build our identity on shaky foundations of willpower or reputation. We rest in Christ’s finished work. HIS faithfulness, HIS obedience, HIS righteousness given to us by grace.
This identity frees us to stop hustling for approval and start walking in assurance. In Jesus, we don’t just have a NEW NAME, we have A NEW NATURE. A NEW FUTURE. A NEW HOPE.

Reflection Questions:

– What labels or false identities have you been clinging to that Jesus never gave you?

– What might change in your life if you truly believed what Christ says about you?

– How can you let God’s—Father, Son, Holy Spirit—define you more than your inner critic?

Prayer

Lord Jesus, when I’m tempted to believe the lies, the ones that say I’m not enough, too far gone, or too broken, pull me back to the truth. Remind me that my identity doesn’t rise or fall with my performance. It rests securely in who You are and what You’ve done. When the old labels come rushing in… When the voices of the past get loud… When shame tries to cover me like a heavy blanket…. Lift my eyes. Remind me that I am not who the world says I am. I am who You say I am. You call me beloved. You call me new. You call me Yours. So today and every day, I ask you to help me to rest, not in striving, not in perfection, but in Your faithfulness, Your righteousness, Your finished work. Help me live from the identity You’ve already spoken over me: FREE. FORGIVEN. CHOSEN. REDEEMED. In Your powerful and loving name, I pray, Amen.

“Hear What Jesus Says To You, His Church!” Pt2

Part 2A:

Part 2B:

Full Message:


Scripture: Revelation 1-3


Summary:

In Part 2 of his sermon series, Pastor Timothy Brassell continues his heartfelt exhortation for the Church to actively listen, obey, and respond to the living voice of Jesus Christ. Preaching from Revelation chapters 1–3, Pastor Tim proclaims that Jesus is not only Savior, but JudgeLord, and Living Head of His Church. Through the lens of each of the seven churches addressed in Revelation, he emphasizes Jesus’ loving discipline, the necessity of repentance, and the call to faithful endurance amid tribulation. Using both Scripture and the insights of theologian T.F. Torrance, he reveals that the Church is God’s chosen instrument in history — called to suffer, witness, and reign with Christ, embodying His redeeming presence on earth.

“The Church is the instrument and medium on earth through which God Almighty is at work. It is around this Church that the love of God and the whole history now revolves.”
— T.F. Torrance

“The Church is not meant to call men and women out of the world into a safe religious enclave but to call them out in order to send them back as agents of God’s kingship.”
— Lesslie Newbigin, The Gospel in a Pluralist Society, 1989, p. 232

Key Points and Highlights:

👑 Jesus is Lord, Judge, and Present Among His Church

• Jesus walks among His Church, not as a distant God, but as a present Lord and Judge.
Reflective Question: Do I recognize Jesus as my judge and leader, not just my comforter?
#ChristIsLord #JesusJudges

🕯️ The Church Must Listen, Obey, and Repent

• Hearing Jesus means obeying Him. Obedience is the mark of true listening in Scripture.
Reflective Question: In what areas am I hearing God’s word but resisting His call to action?
#HearAndObey #SpiritLedLife

🔥 Judgment Begins With the Church

• God’s judgment begins in His own house, before the Church judges the world, it must examine itself.
Reflective Question: Am I more concerned with judging the world than being purified by Christ myself?
#SelfExamination #HouseOfGod

🛑 Jesus’ Rebuke Is Love in Action

• Christ’s rebuke and discipline are signs of His deep love, not rejection.
Reflective Question: Am I receiving correction as a gift of grace or resisting it in pride?
#GodCorrectsInLove #DisciplineIsGrace

🌍 The Church Is God’s Instrument in History

• The Church is where God exerts His redeeming power, not politics or culture.
Reflective Question: Do I see the Church as central to what God is doing in the world?
#ChurchOnMission #KingdomPurpose

🌊 Tribulation Is Normal for the Faithful

• Suffering and opposition confirm our union with Christ and purify our witness.
Reflective Question: Am I shrinking back from difficulty or stepping into Christ’s refining fire?
#FaithUnderFire #RefinedInChrist

💡 Return to Your First Love

• Like the church in Ephesus, we must not let ministry or routine replace love for Christ.
Reflective Question: What does loving Jesus first look like in my everyday life right now?
#FirstLove #SpiritualRenewal

🕊️ Repentance Is Ongoing and Necessary

• Each church is called to specific repentance — and so are we.
Reflective Question: What is Jesus specifically calling me (or our church) to repent of today?
#DailyRepentance #ChurchRenewal

✝️ Victory Comes Through the Cross

• The Church overcomes not by strength, but by the blood of the Lamb and faithful testimony.
Reflective Question: How can I more boldly live and speak as a witness to Christ today?
#VictoryInJesus #CrossPower

🔭 Urgency, Endurance, and Expectation

• The Church must live with urgent expectation, holding fast until Christ returns.
Reflective Question: Am I living as if Jesus could return today, or have I grown complacent?
#LiveReady #JesusIsComing

Context & Reflective Moment:

This message challenges the Church to embrace the full identity Christ offers: a beloved but disciplined people, a kingdom of priests, a body called to suffer with Jesus in order to reign with Him. Drawing from the piercing truths of Revelation 1–3 and the historic insights of T.F. Torrance, Pastor Tim reminds us that the Church is not peripheral, it is central to God’s redemptive plan in the world. His warning is clear: judgment starts with us, and Christ walks among His people today. His invitation is just as clear: listen, obey, repent, and reign.

🕯️ Jesus is knocking. Will we answer?
📖 Revelation 3:20 – “Behold, I stand at the door and knock…”

“Hear What Jesus Says To You, His Church!” | Part 1

Part 1A:

Part 1B:

Full Message:


Scripture: Revelation 2 – 3


Summary:

Pastor Timothy Brassell delivers a Gospel message emphasizing the living voice of Jesus Christ, who continues to speak today to His Church through Scripture and the Spirit. Centered on Revelation chapters 2 and 3, the sermon calls believers to active listening, repentance, renewal, and deeper intimacy with God [Father-Son-Holy-Spirit]. Pastor Tim highlights the critical role of Scripture in discerning Christ’s guidance, the unity of the Church as His body, and the personal and communal call to holiness. He inspires listeners to embrace their identity as Spirit-filled ambassadors, stressing the urgency of faithful endurance and active participation in God’s ongoing mission despite the trials in a challenging world.

“The call of the gospel is for the Church to be the Church — for a people to be shaped by the good news that Jesus is Lord.”
— N.T. Wright, Simply Christian (2006)


Key Points and Highlights

🌟 Jesus Is Speaking Right Now
• Jesus continues to lead and guide His Church personally through Scripture and the Holy Spirit.
Reflective Question: Am I making time to truly hear what Christ is saying to me today?
#JesusSpeaks #ActiveFaith

🛡️ Scripture: A Living Dialogue
• The Bible is not a static book but the living Word through which Christ communicates with His people.
Reflective Question: How can I prioritize Scripture as part of my daily conversation with God [Father-Son-Holy-Spirit]?
#BibleReading #HearingGod

🌱 Christ at the Center of the Church
• The Church’s unity, symbolized by the menorah, flows from Christ alone — not from human institutions.

“The Church exists to set up in the world a new sign which is radically dissimilar to the world’s own manner and which contradicts it in a way which is full of promise.”
— Karl Barth, Dogmatics in Outline (1949)

Reflective Question: Do I view the Church primarily as Christ’s living body, or just a building or event?
#ChurchUnity #BodyOfChrist

🔄 Returning to Our First Love
• Christ calls believers to repent and reignite the passionate love they once had for Him.
Reflective Question: What distracted me from my first love, and how is Jesus calling me back today?
#FirstLove #SpiritualRenewal

🔥 Judgment Begins with the House of God
• The Church is called to honest self-examination before pointing outward at the world’s failures.
Reflective Question: Am I allowing Christ to lovingly correct and purify me as part of His Church?
#Holiness #SelfExamination

🕊️ Deeper Intimacy Through Repentance
• Jesus knocks at the door of our hearts, inviting ongoing relationship, not just one-time salvation. Revelation 3:20
Reflective Question: In what areas of my life is Jesus inviting me into deeper communion with Him?
#AbideInChrist #RelationshipNotReligion

⚔️ Overcoming by the Spirit
• Christ promises victory and eternal rewards for those who persevere and overcome in His name.
Reflective Question: What struggles am I facing today that Christ has already empowered me to overcome?
#Overcomers #VictoryInJesus

🌍 Faithful Endurance in a Broken World
• Christians are called to patiently endure hardship, witnessing to God’s grace even in suffering.

“When Christ calls a man, he bids him come and die.”
— Dietrich Bonhoeffer, The Cost of Discipleship (1937)

“God whispers to us in our pleasures, speaks in our conscience, but shouts in our pains: it is His megaphone to rouse a deaf world.”
— C.S. Lewis, The Problem of Pain (1940)

Reflective Question: How can I embody faithful endurance and hope in my daily life and challenges? #Endurance #HopeInHardship

📖 Reclaiming a Love for Scripture
• A vibrant Christian life demands returning to regular, engaged Bible reading and reflection.
Reflective Question: What can I change in my schedule or habits to fall back in love with God’s Word?
#ScriptureFirst #BibleLife

🌟 Living as Ambassadors for Christ
• Believers are commissioned as Christ’s representatives, called to plead with the world to be reconciled to God.
Reflective Question: Who in my life needs to hear the invitation to reconciliation through Christ today?
#AmbassadorsForChrist #MissionOfLove

Context:

This message by Pastor Timothy Brassell stresses the ongoing, living relationship believers have with Jesus Christ. Anchored in Revelation chapters 2 and 3, it calls the Church to a deeper dependence on Scripture, renewed unity, repentance, endurance, and joyful participation in God’s mission. Pastor Tim reminds the Church that it is both deeply loved and lovingly corrected by Christ and that through Scripture and the Spirit, Jesus continues to call His people to shine brightly as His living witnesses in a broken world.

“Resurrection For Real Life!”

Devotional By Pastor Timothy Brassell

Scripture: John 20

“He is Risen Indeed!”
When Mary Magdalene wept outside the tomb, she thought Jesus was gone. But then—He said her name. “Mary.” In a moment, despair turned to joy. The risen Jesus stood before her, not as a ghost, but in a glorified, real human body. She ran to tell the others, “I have seen the Lord!”

The resurrection isn’t just something that happened—it’s Someone alive. Jesus didn’t just rise; He is the Resurrection and the Life (John 11:25). That means resurrection isn’t primarily an idea or doctrinal teaching first. It’s a Person you can know. The Person of Jesus!

Real Hope for Real Life
The empty tomb means more than victory over death. It means you will live. As Paul wrote, “In Christ all will be made alive” (1 Cor. 15:22). Resurrection is humanity’s future—because Jesus is humanity’s new Head transforming bodily the entire human family. You’re not facing death alone, or anything alone. You’re heading toward life in Christ.

So, what does this mean now?

  • It means you can face and share grief with hope. “This is not the last word.”
  • It means you treat every person as someone God wants to and will raise.
  • It means your ordinary days are colored by God’s extraordinary future.

The Risen Christ Comes to You
Mary saw Him. Thomas touched Him. The disciples heard His “Peace be with you.” His meeting them as the Living Savior personally made all of the difference. And now, Jesus comes to you, personally. Not as a memory, but through the Holy Spirit, the Risen One reveals Himself to you – your heart, the very center of your being. You can’t study Him like any other subject to know Him. He must meet You, and you Him —again and again, and this all by His initiation and grace!

Have you?

If the Resurrection is personal, and it is, it’s also a call. Jesus doesn’t ask for admiration. He asks for relational allegiance. He is the Resurrected One that you might share with Him in His Relationship with His Father in the Holy Spirit forevermore! You can’t stand in the middle. He doesn’t allow you to take Him neutrally. You either worship and walk with Him or walk away, resurrected body and all. But to those who believe, Jesus says: “Blessed are those who have not seen and yet believe.”

 Today’s Reflection:
Jesus, You are not only alive—You are here. Make Yourself known to me. Make Yourself known to me again, today. Let Your Resurrection Life and hope shape my words, my work, and my worship. I don’t just want to admire You—I want to follow You. I want to know and trust Your Father as You do. I want to be filled with the pleasures of Your Spirit in communion and fellowship with You and the Father forevermore, overflowing into my relationship with all creation! Thank You!

 Question for the Day:
Who do you say Jesus is? (hint: Your response will only be correct when it is the same as Jesus’! Ha!)

“What happened on that day (of Easter) became, was and remained the center around which everything else moves. For everything lasts its time, but the love of God—which was at work and was expressed in the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead—lasts forever. Because this event took place, there is no reason to despair, and even when we read the newspaper with all its confusing and frightening news, there is every reason to hope.”

— Karl Barth, Insights: Karl Barth’s Reflections on the Life of Faith, p. 30