Too often we open our prayers in adoration in an effort to manipulate God to act on our behalf. This morning we are going to focus in on adoring God because of his worthiness.
Too often we open our prayers in adoration in an effort to manipulate God to act on our behalf. This morning we are going to focus in on adoring God because of his worthiness.
One of the regular practices of Jesus in the Gospels was to spend time alone with the Father offering up his desires in prayer, and this is something that we need to learn to incorporate in our Christian lives.
As we begin our series on prayer, we will look at how so many of the instructions from Jesus in the New Testament are teaching us that we need to be people that pray together as a church body.
As we close our look at the book of Ephesians, we look at what it means to live and pray in the Spirit as the family of God.
Ephesians begins with Paul explaining the Gospel and then it begins to focus in on what it looks like to live as people that have been changed by the Gospel. This week we will explore what Paul means when he encourages believers to live as children of light.
The second half of Ephesians chapter two begins to teach us what it looks like to be unified as a group of people in Christ.
This week we will begin the second chapter of Ephesians by examining the lowly state of our lives in sin so that we might also see more fully what Jesus has done for us.
The book of Ephesians begins with praise exploding from the pen of Paul as he writes to the Ephesian church about the work of God. This week we will begin a journey working through the book of Ephesians.
One of the most important themes of the writing of Paul is the importance of unity in the church. This is something that we struggle with in a culture that prides itself on individualism and competition, but this morning we are reflecting on how we are unified as one body in Christ.
As we wrap up the series on Ecclesiastes, we step back to see what Solomon identifies as the big problem in life, and the way that Jesus provides an answer in himself.