Wesley Church Podcast
Too often, we treat baptism and confirmation like something we “finish”—when Scripture shows us they are where faith truly begins. In Matthew’s account of Jesus’ baptism, the water is not the conclusion of his story, but the launch of his public ministry. This sermon invites us to remember our baptism not as a past moment, but as a present calling—naming us, claiming us, and commissioning us to live as God’s beloved people in the world.
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At the beginning of a new year, we often focus on looking good—but Epiphany invites us to consider whether we’re actually looking in the right direction. In Matthew 2, the Magi follow the star faithfully, but danger enters the story when assumptions replace attention to God’s leading, while those who knew the Scriptures best never made the short journey to see Jesus for themselves. This sermon challenges us to ask what we’re fixing our eyes on in 2026 and invites us, like the wise men, to kneel in worship and follow the light Christ gives—one faithful step at a time.
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Week One of Advent: Hope
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This sermon connects the space-age hope of the 1960s, the promise of Isaiah 65, and Jesus’ call in Mark 13 to remind us what Advent is truly about. We don’t deny the brokenness around us—Advent teaches us to hope right through it, to live as if God’s future is already breaking in. It all centers on one question: Do you see what I see?
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This week, Pastor Greg preaches on Luke 21:5-19 and reminds us that Jesus asks for us is to be the presence that offers transformation for all the world.
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This week, Bishop Beard preaches on his new ministry "Catching Like Jesus" and reminds us that Jesus can catch fish anywhere.
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Traditional Worship 8.17.25
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Week 3: Require Micah 6:8- "He has shown you, O mortal, what is good. And what does the Lord require of you? To act justly and to love mercy and to walk humbly with your God." The Book of Micah delivers a message of both judgment and hope. Micah confronts Israel and Judah for their injustice, idolatry, and exploitation of the vulnerable. He warns that their actions will lead to destruction, yet he also proclaims that God will not abandon His people forever. In the midst of this, Micah reveals what God truly requires: not empty rituals, but a life of justice, mercy, and...
info_outlineKnowledge is good, but there is a vast difference between knowledge and wisdom
We might amass all the knowledge we can cram into our brains, but without wisdom, our knowledge is useless.
Where does real wisdom come from? Where can we find it? How do we obtain it?