icon__search

From / To

January 2019

Absolutes/Possibilities • North Oak

January 20, 2019 • Mark Sheets

Over and over in the scriptures God challenges what people had accepted as fact: an old woman conceiving a child, outsiders being welcomed into the faith. God is a God of possibilities! How often do we let assumptions shape what we dismiss as impossible? Few things are as absolute as we may think.

Abolutes/Possibilities • Platte Co

January 20, 2019 • Adam Mustoe

Over and over in the scriptures God challenges what people had accepted as fact: an old woman conceiving a child, outsiders being welcomed into the faith. God is a God of possibilities! How often do we let assumptions shape what we dismiss as impossible? Few things are as absolute as we may think.

Absolutes/Possibilities • Gladstone

January 20, 2019 • Kayla Meredith

Over and over in the scriptures God challenges what people had accepted as fact: an old woman conceiving a child, outsiders being welcomed into the faith. God is a God of possibilities! How often do we let assumptions shape what we dismiss as impossible? Few things are as absolute as we may think.

Me/We • North Oak

January 13, 2019 • Mark Sheets

It doesn't take long for babies to say their first words- of which "mine" is sure to come quickly. So often we seem hard wired to put ourselves first. In the New Testament we see that this mindset isn't the same as "the mind of Christ." How can we go from thinking of ourselves first to looking to the interests of others?

Me/We • Platte Co

January 13, 2019 • Adam Mustoe

It doesn't take long for babies to say their first words- of which "mine" is sure to come quickly. So often we seem hard wired to put ourselves first. In the New Testament we see that this mindset isn't the same as "the mind of Christ." How can we go from thinking of ourselves first to looking to the interests of others?

Me/We • Gladstone

January 13, 2019 • Kayla Meredith

It doesn't take long for babies to say their first words- of which "mine" is sure to come quickly. So often we seem hard wired to put ourselves first. In the New Testament we see that this mindset isn't the same as "the mind of Christ." How can we go from thinking of ourselves first to looking to the interests of others?

Critic / Champion • North Oak

January 6, 2019 • Mark Sheets

Often it is easier to tear down than to build up. Pointing out problems doesn't take much imagination, offering solutions does. God chose to work most powerfully through a person that went from hunting Christians to starting churches. Being a critic is easy, becoming a champion bears more fruit.

Critic / Champion • Platte Co

January 6, 2019 • Adam Mustoe

Often it is easier to tear down than to build up. Pointing out problems doesn't take much imagination, offering solutions does. God chose to work most powerfully through a person that went from hunting Christians to starting churches. Being a critic is easy, becoming a champion bears more fruit.

Critic / Champion • Gladstone

January 6, 2019 • Kayla Meredith

Often it is easier to tear down than to build up. Pointing out problems doesn't take much imagination, offering solutions does. God chose to work most powerfully through a person that went from hunting Christians to starting churches. Being a critic is easy, becoming a champion bears more fruit.

From/To Promo

January 6, 2019

We tend to like what is comfortable, what we're used to. But staying cozy can keep us from God's best. A wise person once said Christianity is like a bike: you're either moving forward or you're falling off. If we don't want the scenery to get stale, if we want to grow, how do we get from here to there?