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In todays Leadership Lessons Pastor James Murray shows us shows that maturity in Christ requires self-devotion. A healthy church happens when believers take responsibility to worship, serve, and give without being told. In Acts 2:42–47 hospitality was central to the early church. It wasn’t entertaining, it was including. Open tables, open homes, and open hearts made the Gospel visible. As leaders, we must ask: Do we live as Jesus lived? True hospitality transforms, reminding people they are worthy of God’s love.
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Every human knows the sting of brokenness, but the root is sin, shalom disturbed. Pastor James Murray reminds us tha the answer isn’t masking or ignoring it but Jesus, who carried our brokenness to the cross, rose in victory, and now redeems what was lost. He transforms us from the inside out, unbreaking what was broken. The “more” your soul longs for is Him.
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1 Samuel 14. While Saul sat under a pomegranate tree, Jonathan chose risk over comfort. With only an armor-bearer beside him, he stepped out on a “perhaps the Lord will act” kind of faith. God didn’t guarantee an outcome, but He guaranteed His character. The climb was steep, but trust in God’s nature was enough. The message reminds us: true faith isn’t certainty in circumstances, but courage rooted in who God is. Pastor Josh Kelsey shows us how Jonathan’s “perhaps” echoes Jesus in Gethsemane, obedience wrestled through the unknown, yet surrendered.
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Many of us approach Scripture as a task to check off, rather than the nourishment our souls desperately need. In this week’s reflection, we see in Ezekiel 3:1–3 a powerful image of the prophet being told to eat the scroll of God’s Word. When we internalize Scripture not just read or hear it, but let it sink into the depths of who we are it changes everything. Pastor Josh Kelsey reminds us that even words of lament can become sweet as honey when digested in faith. God’s Word, taken in fully, becomes life-giving truth that reshapes us from the inside out. Spiritual growth happens when we...
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Pastor Josh Kelsey reminds us that every human asks, “Is there more to life than this?” (Ecclesiastes 3:11). Solomon had wealth, wisdom, and power, yet concluded it was all vapor without God. The ache of the human heart is eternity written within us, but we try to fill it with career, romance, wealth, or freedom idols that promise life but leave us restless. Jesus doesn’t just offer more life; He is life. The Good Shepherd lays down His life so our emptiness can be filled with His abundance. The “more” your soul longs for isn’t in you, it’s through Him.
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Pastor Kevin Myers reminds us that every human asks, “Is there more to life than this?” Ecclesiastes 3:11. Solomon had wisdom, wealth, and power yet still found it all empty without God. The problem isn’t lack of success but a broken relationship. Spiritual amnesia makes us forget who we are, so we chase possessions, pleasure, and even religion like grasping vapor. The answer isn’t in grasping but in knowing. Jesus redeems relationship and invites us into the eternal love we were made for. The “more” your soul longs for is Him.
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Avoiding conflict out of fear, lack of skill or misapplied theology robs us of growth, freedom and untity. In this week's Leadership Lesson Pastor Amy Perez explores how scripture shows us that healthy confrontation, when done in humility and love become a tool for restoration. Leaders go first before God, owning their fears and motives so they can speak truth that brings life, not shame. Conflict God's way isn't destruction it's discipleship.
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Pastor Jon Tyson reminds us that surrender is the true test of trust. Like Saul, we often rationalize partial obedience or try to control outcomes, but God asks for the final 2%. Control robs us of love, freedom, and intimacy with Him, while surrender roots us in trust just as Jesus trusted His Father with His life and future. God doesn’t punish us by asking for surrender; He sees everything and knows what’s best. True freedom isn’t found in control, but in yielding fully to Him.
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In this weeks Leadership Lessons Pastor Josh Kelsey guides us through Habakkuk's raw wrestle with God and what it means for leaders today. Surrounded by injustice and silence, Habakkuk didn’t suppress his doubts, he brought them to God. That’s where true leadership starts: in prayer, not the flesh. God’s response still speaks today: “I am doing something you would not believe.” Even when life feels confusing, He’s working behind the scenes. The promise remains—“the earth will be filled with the knowledge of the glory of the Lord” (Hab. 2:14). This knowledge isn’t just...
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This Sunday Pastor Josh Kelsey shows us how complaining is more than words, it’s poison that delays the promise. Israel’s grumbling in the wilderness revealed unbelief, but God’s response was both strange and beautiful: look and live. Healing didn’t come from striving harder but from fixing their eyes on the serpent lifted on the pole. Centuries later, Jesus fulfills this moment on the cross becoming the curse so we could be free. True freedom isn’t the absence of snakes, it’s the presence of a Savior who breaks their power. Stop fighting the snakes. Stop striving. Lift your...
info_outlineGod’s strategy has always been multiplication, not accumulation.
In this weeks Leadership Lesson, Pastor Josh Kelsey unpacks Numbers 11 and the moment when God took the Spirit that was on Moses and placed it on the seventy elders, showing us that leadership was never meant to be carried alone. Impartation happens when the burden outweighs our capacity, and it’s in those moments we learn this was never about us, it’s always been God.
If you’ve been carrying the weight of leadership, ministry, or vision alone, this episode is a prophetic reminder that multiplication requires unity, surrender, and supernatural trust. Pastor Josh challenges us to ask: Who are you gathering? Are you creating space for others? Are you submitted before you’re leading?