• Living Like It's Here - Week 2
    Feb 9 2026

    Living Like It’s Here is the second message in the series Revival Isn’t Coming, It’s Calling, and it challenges a common mindset in the Church today. Many believers pray passionately for revival, hoping God will move “someday.” But what if revival isn’t something we wait for—what if it’s something we live?

    Drawing from Acts 2:42–47, this sermon paints a powerful picture of what real revival looks like. The early church didn’t wait for the right moment, a special gathering, or a spiritual surge. Ordinary people lived every day with the conviction that God was already at work—and their lives reflected it. Revival wasn’t an event on their calendar; it was their daily rhythm.

    This message explores four defining marks of authentic revival. First, revival looks like devotion—faithfulness rooted in spiritual habits, not emotional hype. Second, real revival creates genuine community. Acts describes a family, not a crowd, reminding us that faith grows best around tables, not just in rows. Third, generosity becomes a natural overflow. Revival reshapes what we value, loosening our grip on possessions and tightening our grip on people. Finally, changed lives draw others in. The watching world wasn’t attracted by an event, but by a radically different way of living.

    Living Like It’s Here calls us to stop waiting for revival and start embodying it. Because revival isn’t an experience we attend—it’s a lifestyle we choose.

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    29 mins
  • Revival Starts With Me - Week 1
    Feb 2 2026

    Revival Starts With Me launches the bold new series Revival Isn’t Coming, It’s Calling with a sobering but hope-filled truth: revival doesn’t begin in the streets—it begins in the heart. Many of us have prayed, “God, move in our city” or “God, send revival,” yet nothing seems to change. This message confronts the uncomfortable reality that revival isn’t delayed because God is unwilling—it’s delayed because His people are.

    Rooted in 2 Chronicles 7:14, this sermon reminds us that God’s pattern has never changed. He doesn’t start with cities, cultures, or crowds. He starts with surrendered people—people willing to humble themselves, pray, seek His face, and turn from what He’s been asking them to lay down. Revival is not emotional services, packed altars, famous speakers, or goosebump worship moments. Revival is God restoring what His people abandoned through deep repentance, renewed holiness, and obedient lives.

    Looking at historical awakenings—from the First Great Awakening to the Welsh Revival and Asbury—we see the same pattern repeated: humility leads to repentance, repentance to obedience, and obedience to transformation. The reason many of us feel stuck is simple—we pray for God to move while protecting what He asks us to surrender.

    This message culminates in a powerful moment of communion and response, inviting each person to examine their heart and fully surrender one area of their life. Revival can’t be outsourced or inherited. Stop waiting. Start living like you want revival—because revival isn’t coming…it’s calling.

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    36 mins
  • Holding On To Truth - Week 2
    Jan 25 2026
    “Holding On To Truth” is the second message in the “In With The New” series, calling us to let go of the old habit of redefining truth and embrace the new way of building our lives on God’s unchanging Word. In a culture that is constantly shifting—where truth is often shaped by feelings, opinions, and trends—followers of Jesus are challenged to stand on something firmer. What feels right today may not hold when life gets heavy, but God’s truth never changes.Jesus declares in John 14:6 that He is “the way and the truth and the life.” Truth is not something we invent to fit our circumstances; it is something we receive from God. When truth is anchored in feelings, it drifts. When it is anchored in Scripture, it stands firm. As Psalm 119 reminds us, God’s Word is eternal, reliable, and trustworthy.This message also looks to Daniel, who resolved to honor God before pressure ever arrived. His story shows us that faith isn’t accidental—it’s a daily decision to choose truth over convenience. While feelings are real, Scripture warns us they are not reliable guides. God calls His people to test what they hear, walk in wisdom, and rely on His Word rather than their own understanding.Ultimately, God’s Word provides what culture never can: stability, direction, and transformation. When life applies pressure, truth determines what holds. This sermon challenges us to anchor our lives in Scripture before culture defines us—and to pray daily, “Jesus, let Your truth guide me.” Because culture will shift, opinions will change, but God’s Word will always stand.
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    40 mins
  • Pajamas & Pancakes - Testimonial (Joseph Gutwein-Schultz - Guest Speaker)
    Jan 25 2026

    Speacial guest speaker Joseph Gutwein-Schultz shares his testimony.

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    52 mins
  • Living Sent - Week 4
    Jan 25 2026

    “Living Sent” is the fourth message in our In With The New series, and it confronts a lifestyle most of us don’t even question anymore—consumerism. In a world that constantly tells us life is about more money, more stuff, more comfort, and more approval, it’s easy to start shopping our souls away without realizing it.

    Pastor Billy opens honestly, admitting how easy it is to become a “professional consumer”—and inviting all of us to ask the same question: What am I really chasing? Because while chasing “more” promises fulfillment, it often leaves us feeling emptier than before.

    Jesus speaks directly into this tension when He says, “Where your treasure is, there your heart will be also” (Matthew 6:19–21). Our money, time, and attention reveal what we worship. And the truth is, we were never created to live as consumers—we were created to live sent.

    This message challenges us to lift our eyes from what is temporary and set our hearts on what is eternal. Drawing from Colossians 3, Acts 1, and 1 Peter 3, we’ll rediscover that God doesn’t just save us to sit—He saves us to send. Our lives are meant to be a mission story, not a consumption story.

    You’ll leave with practical steps for the week: replacing one “treat yourself” habit with generosity, looking for one opportunity to share hope, and learning to live with purpose beyond the feed. Because your soul wasn’t built for a bargain—it was built for a mission.

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    31 mins
  • Growing Together - Week 3
    Jan 19 2026
    We admire independence. It sounds strong, capable, and self-sufficient. Isolation can even feel safe. But over time, independence can quietly turn into isolation—and isolation is one of the fastest ways faith begins to drift. In Growing Together, we confront an old pattern that feels normal in today’s culture but slowly weakens our spiritual lives.We live in a world where we are constantly connected digitally yet increasingly disconnected relationally. We have access to endless information, but information alone does not produce transformation. Faith was never meant to be consumed privately or practiced in isolation. God designed spiritual growth to happen in community, where lives intersect, truth is reinforced, and love takes root. Simply put, transformation happens in community.The early church faced many of the same pressures we do—cultural confusion, false teaching, and a drift toward self-made spirituality. Writing to the believers in Colossae, Paul urges them to be “encouraged and knit together by strong ties of love” and warns them not to be captured by “empty philosophies and high-sounding nonsense… rather than from Christ” (Colossians 2:1–8, NIV). His message is clear: confusion grows fastest when people walk alone.Isolation leaves us exposed to bad theology, cultural pressure, emotional decision-making, and spiritual shortcuts. Faith rarely disappears all at once; isolation slowly makes it ineffective. Like a hammer, faith may be strong on its own, but it becomes useful only when put to work with others.The bottom line is unmistakable: out with the old way of going it alone; in with the new way of growing together. Faith grows through practice and people, and habits grow stronger when they are shared—not isolated.
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    36 mins
  • I Got This - Week 1
    Jan 6 2026
    Life in 2026 moves fast. Calendars are full, bills get paid, and on the surface things seem fine. Yet for many, there’s a quiet, nagging sense that something is missing. In week one of In With The New, we begin with a familiar mindset summed up in three simple words: “I Got This.” It’s the default posture of a secular age that tells us God is helpful—but not necessary. Trust yourself. Try harder. Figure it out.This sermon explores why a self-sufficient life can look successful on the outside and still feel empty on the inside. Scripture reminds us this struggle isn’t new. Through the words of Jeremiah and Ecclesiastes, we see a timeless pattern: people walking away from the fountain of living water and trying to satisfy their thirst with cracked cisterns that can’t hold it. The result is motion without meaning—life that feels like chasing the wind.Jesus brings clarity and hope when He says, “Apart from me you can do nothing” (John 15:5). He doesn’t call us to strive harder but to stay connected—to live dependent lives that bear lasting fruit. At the core, the issue isn’t effort, but independence. When areas of life feel stuck—work, relationships, finances, parenting—it’s often because we’ve been trying to carry them alone.Anchored in Colossians 1:28–29, this message invites us to move out with the old way of self-sufficiency and in with the new way of depending fully on God, discovering the power, purpose, and peace that only Christ can provide.
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    31 mins
  • A Not So Perfect Christmas - Week 8
    Dec 22 2025
    Christmas can feel chaotic, busy, and overwhelming, but the truth of the season is that God’s grace entered the story first—not perfection. In the eighth installment of our series, Jesus and the Griswolds, we explore "A Not-So-Perfect Christmas." Just as Clark Griswold’s dreams of a "big family Christmas" spiraled into madness, the first Christmas was also messy, lacking the perfect timing, setting, or plan. Yet, Jesus shows up in the mess, meeting us in our chaos and noise.This week, we look at Todd and Margo—the neighbors who were blinded and irritated by Clark’s lights. Like them, people can be impacted by God’s light through your life, even if they didn’t ask for it. We also see this in the shepherds from Luke 2:8–10; they were ordinary outcasts, yet God chose them to deliver extraordinary hope.As Matthew 5:16 reminds us, you are the light of the world. You don’t need a sermon or all the answers; you just need to let Jesus be seen through your actions. Some may never open a Bible, but they are watching your life. Your challenge this week is to invite a neighbor, coworker, or even an enemy into the story. You don’t need a perfect Christmas; you just need a perfect Savior. Let go of the pressure and let your life reflect His grace, hope, and love—because you may be the only light someone ever sees.
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    23 mins