Sinopsis
Weekly Messages from Faith Community Church of Hopkinton
Episodios
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
AXIOM CHALLENGE: Week 2 (with Elizabeth Grady-Harper)
03/07/2016 Duración: 41minCheck out the videos referenced in this episode: Optimal Lifestyle – Active Listening. How to be a great listener: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z_-rNd7h6z8 International Justice Mission – IJM: Fighting to End Slavery. For Good: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wKXSKJrOxbI
-
-
-
You Have My Word On It: I Will Give You What You Need (with Pastor Dorian Botsis)
12/06/2016 Duración: 38minCheck out the videos Pastor Dorian references in this message!: First World Problems Read by Third World People: https://youtu.be/k3HrkQaPHAA This 9-Year-Old Girl Creates Beautiful Care Packages for Homeless Women: https://youtu.be/2pH4hsFodkc Dear Water: You Are a Blessing | World Vision: https://youtu.be/A_FTqaOTj74
-
You Have My Word On It: I Will Give You Peace (with Pastor George Cladis)
05/06/2016 Duración: 38min -
-
JONAH: How to See the World Through God's Eyes
22/05/2016 Duración: 40minPastor Mike references this song in his message. Check it out!: https://youtu.be/6Hi-VMxT6fc Jonah was angry that he was so successful. He didn't want these people to receive forgiveness. He felt they deserved to be punished. Jonah knew God's character. Throughout the whole story, he knew that God was loving, kind and merciful. He would forgive. God sends an object lesson. God reveals the true nature of Jonah's faith through a plant. Jonah was a religious man who did not see the world through God's eyes. He was comfortable and content with his own security and safety. He did not care about the people who, he believed, deserved what they got. He didn't care about the 1% of his world. He especially didn't care about the 1% who felt were undeserving of freedom and forgiveness. He didn't understand that he wasn't deserving either. God leaves us with a question that causes us to examine our own motivation. Shouldn't we share God's concern for people's salvation more than our own comfort?
-
JONAH: How to be Successful
15/05/2016 Duración: 41minJonah had a powerfully successful ministry: the whole city converted. Ninevah was in tough shape. Their nation had diminished in power, influence and reputation. A famine had struck the land so the people were suffering economically and physically. They were looking for hope and Jonah delivered it. The people jumped on the prospect of God's help and dedicated themselves to change. God proved Himself faithful once again. When they converted, He forgave them. Its amazing, God is eager to respond to our repentance. Jonah's ministry was wildly successful. A whole city relented from its evil. We're not sure what the 'evil' was but they relented. Did they deserve to be punished? Probably. Did they deserve mercy? No. But God's love in amazing. He turns enemies into followers. Ninevah is an example that anyone can turn to God if we give them the chance.
-
JONAH: How to Pray when you are in Trouble
08/05/2016 Duración: 34minTo check out the videos Pastor Mike references in this episode go to: https://youtu.be/K-H35Mpj4uk (In the Heart of the Sea - Final Trailer) http://www.iamsecond.com/seconds/wayne-huizenga/ (I Am Second - Wayne Huizenga) Life is miserable when you don't obey God. We run from His call into trouble. Jonah thought he was dead. He sank into the seas and God sent a most unusual salvation. It was an object lesson. Jonah was reminded that death was terrible, separation from God miserable and disobedience dangerous. In the depths of despair, Jonah cried out to God and God saved Him. Jonah is a story of God's grace - for those who don't Him and those who do but rebel. Jonah received grace. He was given a second chance in order to serve God. Sometimes God will make us miserable in order to save us. We may sink in desperation, drowning in the consequences of our own choices but we are never too far gone for God's grace to reach us. God saved Jonah through unusual means to catch his attention. He wanted to forgive Jonah
-
JONAH: What to do when you don't want to do what God wants you to do
01/05/2016 Duración: 42minJonah received a clear, direct call from God to bring a message of change to a specific people in a specific place. The call was undeniable; Jonah didn't want to do it. So, what do you do when you don't want to do what God wants you to do? One option is to run, avoid the responsibility. This is a particularly appealing option when you don't like the people—you believe they deserve to be punished—and don't want to help them. Obedience is a sign that we love God and see people the way He does. We want everyone, even our enemies, to find hope and reconciliation. Because of love, we should understand that the best action towards the worst people is to help them find salvation. We can run but God has a way of following us wherever we go. God is determined to reach the unreached, even if He has to shake us up to get us to help. We can run, but that doesn't mean life will be better for it.
-
EMOJI: Anger
24/04/2016 Duración: 43minGod gets angry. So does Jesus. God gets angry at injustice and oppression. Christ gets angry at suffering and with leaders who seek their own benefit rather than the benefit of those they lead. They both hate to see religious leaders neglect their responsibilities to shepherd God's people and twist religion into something that weighs people down rather than free them. Unfortunately, anger can be destructive. We can become instinctive, lashing out with anger before we realize it and then find ourselves overwhelmed with remorse because of what we said or did. Anger can be difficult to control. But God promises freedom from sin. He also promises to renew our minds and fill us with peace. We can retrain ourselves. We can find ways to direct our anger towards good actions and healthy levels.
-
EMOJI: Envy
17/04/2016 Duración: 42minEnvy is the only emotion that makes it's way in the Ten Commandments (covet). It's an expression of lust and greed as well as a possible motivation for stealing, murder and adultery. It is a force that directs many sinful behaviors. Interestingly, it can also be a motivating force for good as well. The Greek word for 'lust' can be used to describe the passion that drives our godly ambitions. When we see people advancing their lives, improving their relationships and growing spiritually, envy can motivate us into personal action. We can want that good for our own lives and make positive changes to get there. The trick is not letting envy drive us into temptation and sin but to let it propel us towards good action.
-
EMOJI: Sadness
10/04/2016 Duración: 42minExpressed in a healthy fashion, sadness can motivate us to be compassionate as we identify with other people's suffering. Sadness also gives us the opportunity to evaluate the true worth of what we have lost. In addition, it allows us to express our love for a person who is gone as well as the pain we are suffering from life's tribulations. Left unchecked though, sadness can grow into despair or depression.It has the power to immobilize us. We stop living in the present because we can't move on from what we have lost. We isolate ourselves from relationships and sink into inaction. We see the world through a dark lense and lose joy. The Bible is clear that expressing sadness in healthy ways is cathartic (just read the Psalms, the Prophets and Lamentations). The key is learning how to express it in ways that don't overwhelm us.
-
EMOJI: Fear
03/04/2016 Duración: 40minTo check out the video Pastor Mike referenced this week: https://www.youtube.com/v/IY-FzWumn_A?start=122&end=216 Fear is an interesting emotion. We are called to 'fear God' - respect His power, His wrath over injustice and His holy distinction. Healthy fear can also keep us from danger and personal harm. Yet, it can immobilize us so that we try to control life and relationships in order to minimize threat. Because of fear, we may not take risks that could grow us or advance our mission in life. Godly people surrender to the fact that life has inherent risks that we cannot control. They learn to distinguish between a foolish risk (one whose outcome can be detrimental) versus a risk of faith (one whose outcome can be beneficial to other people, God's reputation or God's call on your life). Godly people grow familiar with God, His nature and power, so that they have confidence and security in Him to protect them. They stop trying to control the conditions of their life and relationships by learning t