Check Out our Latest Sermon Series
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Sundays at 9:30am and 11am
Recent Series
- A Firm Foundation
- Acts 2:42-47
- Apostles' Creed
- Awaken
- Believing in the Future. Building on the Past.
- Christmas in the Gospels
- Coming Home
- Do This to Remember Me
- Engage
- Extraordinary Nobodies Of the Bible
- First Corinthians - Good News for a Troubled Church
- Getting Rid of Stuff!
- Gospel of the Holy Spirit
- Hope is Born
- Hope, Peace, Joy and Love
- Hospitality
- Humility
- Isaiah, The Fifth Gospel
- Jeremiah, The Weeping Prophet
- Jesus in the Gospel of John
- Jonah
- Joseph
- King David - A Man After God's Own Heart
- One
- One-Day Sermon Series
- People Jesus Changed
- Peter: Chiseled by the Master’s Hand
- Prophecy
- Proverbs: The Way of Wisdom
- Questions Jesus Asked
- Reformation 500
- Resolved in 2022: To Pray More
- Sacrifice
- Sermon on the Mount
- Signs of Jesus
- Simplicity
- Stewardship
- The Church
- The Forgotten God
- The Fruit of the Spirit
- The Heart of the Matter
- The Journey
- The Life of Moses
- The Songs of Christmas
- The Ten Commandments
- Through the Fire
- Titles for Jesus
- What's in a Name
- Worship
Or search our sermon archives for something of particular interest to you today:
When conflict arose and there was a difference of opinion, how did the early church resolve things and come to a decision?
Led by the Holy Spirit, Peter takes the gospel to the Gentiles.
Paul was changed by Christ, but also by Ananias, Barnabas and Stephen too.
In ever widening ripples the gospel was going out. First to Jews, then Greek Jews, then Samaritans and now to a Eunuch.
Stephen was following the pattern laid down by Christ when he gave his life for the gospel. Paul was there, too.
The Holy Spirit transformed the disciples from fearful and denying cowards to courageous and confessing martyrs.
This chapter outlines God's plan for salvation.
The presence of the Holy Spirit made all the difference in the early church.
Moses took his people through the wilderness to the very edge of the promised land.
No matter how great the gifts of God, we always will complain.
When faced with challenges, do we see only the challenges or can we see the possibilities too?
The story of the covenant is always the story of God’s faithfulness and our unfaithfulness.
What did the covenant mean to the Hebrew people?
Moses and Pharaoh were locked in combat with one another. Why was Pharaoh so reluctant to let the Hebrew people go?
Why was the circumcision of his son such a big deal? Why was it necessary to get Aaron on board?