Episodios

  • Praying With Paul EP4 - Pray Big Prayer
    Jul 14 2025

    Prayer reaches its fullest potential when we move beyond requests for comfort and provision to accessing God's transformative power. Paul's prayer for the Ephesians in Ephesians 1:15-23 demonstrates this approach, prioritizing spiritual wisdom and deeper knowledge of God above all other concerns. Like Solomon who asked for wisdom rather than wealth, we discover that when we seek spiritual understanding first, God often adds other blessings as well. What makes Paul's prayer revolutionary is his emphasis on the resurrection power available to believers—the same divine force that raised Christ from the dead. This power isn't reserved for extraordinary miracles but is available for everyday transformation: overcoming sin patterns, healing relationships, and becoming the people God created us to be. When we pray, we're not just individuals asking for personal favors but part of Christ's body connected to the ultimate authority in the universe. This cosmic perspective expands our prayers beyond immediate concerns to eternal purposes, beyond personal comfort to kingdom advancement. God's plans for us are bigger than our plans for ourselves, and when we align our prayers with His purposes, we participate in His work of cosmic redemption.


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    33 m
  • Praying With Paul EP3 - Grace Is Enough
    Jul 7 2025

    Life often brings us to moments when we pray persistently for something reasonable, only to receive an answer different from what we hoped. The apostle Paul experienced this with his unspecified 'thorn in the flesh,' for which he pleaded with God three times to remove. God's response wasn't to take away the problem but to declare, 'My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness.' This wasn't a delay but a definitive answer that the thorn would remain, accompanied by grace for endurance. God's 'no' can actually be His most loving answer. When we're strong and capable, we might take credit for our accomplishments, but our weaknesses create space for God's power to be demonstrated in ways that are obviously divine rather than human. Paul embraced this truth so completely that he became 'content with weaknesses, insults, hardships, persecutions, and calamities.' This doesn't mean he enjoyed difficulties, but that he found peace in them because he understood their purpose. Our limitations don't disqualify us from usefulness; they qualify us for displaying God's strength. Sometimes the strength we need isn't to change our circumstances but to trust God within them, resting in grace that is completely adequate for whatever we face.


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    32 m
  • Praying with Paul EP2 - God Of All Comfort
    Jul 6 2025

    When we're suffering too much to feel thankful, Paul shows us in 2 Corinthians that we can always start with adoration—focusing on God's character rather than our circumstances. He addresses God as the 'Father of mercies' and 'God of all comfort,' emphasizing God's personal relationship with us and His comprehensive comfort that covers every affliction we face. Paul acknowledges the reality of suffering without getting stuck in it, quickly moving from pain to God's presence and purpose. The revolutionary insight Paul offers is that God comforts us not just for our own sake, but so we can comfort others in their affliction. Our suffering creates empathy and equips us for ministry. Instead of asking 'Why me?' we can ask 'How can God use this?' There's also a mysterious connection between our suffering and Christ's suffering—we're participating in something bigger than our individual pain. While God's comfort doesn't always mean removing suffering immediately, Revelation 21 promises a future where God will wipe away every tear and end all pain. Until then, we can find purpose in our suffering by connecting it to Christ and using it to minister to others.

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    27 m
  • Praying With Paul EP1 - Thank God First
    Jun 23 2025

    The Apostle Paul's letters reveal a consistent prayer pattern that can transform our own prayer lives. In 1 Corinthians 1:1-9, Paul begins with thanksgiving for God's past faithfulness, specifically noting how God's grace had enriched the Corinthians with spiritual gifts despite their many problems. Rather than focusing on their failures, Paul celebrated God's work in their lives.Paul then expresses confidence in God's present power, affirming that the Corinthians lacked no spiritual gift as they awaited Christ's return. This wasn't wishful thinking but rock-solid confidence based on God's character. Finally, Paul concludes with assurance about God's future faithfulness, promising that God would keep them firm until the end so they would be blameless when Christ returns. This assurance wasn't based on their performance but on God's faithfulness to His promises.This gratitude-centered approach to prayer shifts our focus from problems to God's power, decreases anxiety, anchors our worldview in divine faithfulness rather than circumstances, and helps us see evidence of God's grace everywhere. By following Paul's pattern—beginning with specific gratitude, expressing confidence in God's present power, ending with assurance of God's future faithfulness, and committing to intercessory prayer—we can transform not just our words but our entire perspective on life.


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    31 m
  • Godly Inheritance - Fathers Day 2025
    Jun 16 2025

    The most valuable legacy a father can leave isn't found in material possessions but in the daily choices that shape character and spiritual influence. Job, a wealthy man from the land of Uz with ten children, provides a powerful example of godly fatherhood through three essential practices: personal character, promoting unity, and prayerful leadership. Job's character was defined by integrity, moral uprightness, reverence for God, and active avoidance of evil. This wasn't perfection but a consistent pattern developed through daily choices. His example reminds us that children observe and absorb our responses to traffic, how we treat service workers, and how we handle disappointments. Job also created an environment where his adult children genuinely enjoyed gathering together regularly - a testament to the healthy family dynamics he fostered. Most importantly, Job provided spiritual leadership by regularly offering sacrifices for his children, ensuring nothing would separate them from God. Today, this translates to guiding children toward understanding Jesus's sacrifice and developing their own relationship with God. This godly legacy isn't limited to biological fathers but extends to anyone who influences children - grandfathers, uncles, mentors, teachers, and coaches. Even those without positive examples growing up can become generational game-changers through God's grace, establishing new patterns that will echo through future generations. The greatest gift isn't something wrapped or purchased but a godly legacy built through faithful choices, loving interactions, and consistent prayers.


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    40 m
  • Pentecost Sunday 2025
    Jun 8 2025

    Pentecost Sunday marks the moment when the Holy Spirit descended upon the disciples with the sound of rushing wind and tongues of fire, enabling them to speak in languages they had never learned. This miraculous event, witnessed by Jewish pilgrims from across the Roman Empire, resulted in 3,000 people being baptized in a single day. What makes this event truly significant is that it represents God's perfect faithfulness in keeping His promises - exactly as prophesied by Joel and promised by Jesus before His ascension. In a world where promises are often broken, God stands apart as the ultimate promise keeper. His faithfulness extends beyond dramatic moments like Pentecost to the quiet daily miracles we often overlook - each sunrise, each breath, each season change. Through the Holy Spirit, believers experience God's faithfulness personally, being adopted into His family with the intimate privilege of calling Him 'Abba, Father.' This relationship isn't temporary or conditional but permanent and transformative. Even when God's faithfulness doesn't manifest as we expect, His commitment to our ultimate good remains unshakable, demonstrated most powerfully through Christ's sacrifice on the cross.



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    37 m
  • Like Jesus EP5 - Boundary Breaking Love
    Jun 8 2025

    In a world where love often comes with conditions, God's love stands in stark contrast by breaking through every barrier we construct. The profound truth in John 3:16 reveals that God loved the entire cosmos—every race, nation, social class, and background—not just those who seemed deserving. This was revolutionary in Jesus' time when religious leaders had created extensive boundary systems defining who deserved God's favor. Jesus demonstrated this boundary-breaking love throughout His ministry by loving the ungodly, His friends, His enemies, and even those who betrayed Him. God didn't just tell us He loved us—He showed it through the ultimate sacrifice of His Son. This wasn't forced upon God but was His deliberate choice to save rather than condemn humanity. This limitless love transforms not just our eternal destiny but our present relationships, challenging us to love others as God loves us—without condition or limits. We're called to be agents of this same love in a world increasingly divided by boundaries, loving both the lovable and the unlovable, seeing everyone as someone for whom Christ died.

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    28 m
  • Like Jesus EP4 - Love Gets Dirty
    Jun 2 2025

    Jesus demonstrated that authentic love requires getting our hands dirty through His powerful act of washing His disciples' feet. Despite knowing His divine identity and destiny, He chose to perform the task typically assigned to the lowest household servant. This act reveals three important principles about Christlike service: the posture of humility, the touch of love, and the example to follow. Jesus didn't just symbolically wash feet; He physically engaged with what others found repulsive. He could have commanded someone else to do it or used His divine power, but instead chose direct involvement. This challenges us to identify where God is calling us to serve, using our specific talents, spiritual gifts, training, experiences, and passions to meet the needs of those around us. The world tells us to seek positions where others serve us, but Jesus turned this upside down, showing that true greatness lies in serving others. This principle applies to every area of our lives—our families, workplaces, communities, and churches—calling us to close comfortable distances and engage with real needs, even when it takes us out of our comfort zones.


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    31 m