Vision: To Be a Church Where Life Transformation is Normal
December 2024 - (Re)Imagining What Your Life Could Be | Romans 12
How do we get in on the life transformation that is promised in the Scriptures? What does this look like in my life? In this message, we dive deep into Romans 12 and explore how God’s grace renews our minds, reshapes our habits, and pulls us into life-changing relationships.
November 2025 - Strike the Ground: Our Church's Vision for This Cultural Moment | 2 Kings 13
What if God is placing opportunities right in front of you—and you don’t even see them?
In this vision sermon, we explore 2 Kings 13 and the moment God invites King Jehoash to “strike the ground.” It’s a strange story with a powerful question behind it: What will you do with the opportunities God puts in your hands?
We’ll look at the cultural moment we’re living in, the growing spiritual hunger around us, and the call to wake up, pay attention, and join God in what He’s doing.
February 2026 - What the Dying Can See That No One Else Can
Sometimes it takes coming to the end of yourself to see what God is doing.
In 2 Kings 7, four lepers are trapped outside a besieged city—rejected, starving, and staring down death. But their desperation becomes their clarity: they see an option no one else can see. And when they stumble upon an unexpected abundance, they face a choice that will define them: hoard it or share it.
Over the past four years, our church has experienced a similar kind of grace—from meeting in a mold-infested building during a pandemic to stumbling upon an embarrassment of riches we never could have anticipated. Growth in depth. Growth in reach. A movement of God we didn't conjure and can't take credit for.
But that grace raises a question: What do we do with what we've been given? In this Vision Sunday message, we explore what faithful stewardship looks like in this season—and why we believe God is calling us to experiment with a third service from Easter to Father's Day.
This is a day of good news. Let's not keep it to ourselves.