Empowered Part 7 - Pentecost Sunday
Jay Pathak, National Director of Vineyard USA, brings us today's message. Acts 1:8; Acts 2:1-13; Acts 2:17.

Jay Pathak, National Director of Vineyard USA, brings us today's message. Acts 1:8; Acts 2:1-13; Acts 2:17.
Our founding pastor Steve Nicholson brings today's morning message. John 15:26; John 16:5-7; Luke 11:9-13; Matthew 5:6
Jess Sales brings today's message on Spiritual Gifts. 1 Corinthians 12:4-26; Romans 12:4-7; Luke 5:25-26
Brian Van Der Werff brings today's message on Prophecy. 1 Corinthians 14:1-4; John 10:14,27; Joel 2:28-29
Jared Patrick Boyd brings us today's message on the Love of God. Romans 5:5; Ephesians 3:16-19; 1 John 3:1
Adama Diakhaté brings us today's message on faith and healing. Matthew 8:5-13; Jeremiah 17:14; Colossians 1:27b
Jess Sales brings us the first message in our Empowered Series. The Holy Spirit as Revealer. Genesis 1:1-2; 2 Corinthians 5:16; John 3:5-8; John 16:13-15
Ted Kim brings us this week's message: John 11:1, 5, 14-15, 32-44 1 Corinthians 15:22-23 1 Corinthians 15:52-53 John 10:3
Samuel Cordero, pastor of our La Viña congregation, brings us a message on this special Baptism Sunday. Proverbs 4:18; 2 Kings 5:17
Jess Sales brings the second part of our Caring for Creation series. Revelation 21:1; 2 Corinthians 5:17; Romans 8:18-25; Revelation 22:1-2; 2 Peter 3:11-13
Jess Sales brings us today's message on Caring for Creation. Genesis 1:26-31; Exodus 23:10-12; Deuteronomy 22:6-7; Deuteronomy 20:19; Matthew 10:29-31
Ted Kim brings us the conclusion to our series in Exodus. Exodus 24.
Dr. Brittany Kim leads us through the Gospel of Sinai, and offers some reflections on how we can read the Old Testament law today. Brittany is an Old Testament scholar, and adjunct professor of Old Testament at North Park Theological Seminary and Northeastern Seminary. Additionally, she is a spiritual director, author, and co-director of Every Voice: a Center for Kingdom Diversity in Christian Theological Education.
Ted Kim brings us today’s message. Exodus 15:22-27, 16:1-36, 17:1-7.
Keva Green brings us today’s message. Exodus 13-14.
Ted Kim brings us today’s message. Exodus 4:22-23, 11:9, 12:29-37.
Adam Russell, head pastor of the Vineyard church in Campbellsville, Kentucky, and director of Vineyard Worship (USA), joins us to preach on Exodus 3:1-10.
Exodus 2:1-15
Rachel Conner, the executive pastor of Sugar Land Vineyard in Texas, joins us to lead us through Exodus 1:15-22 as we considered what the text tells us about the redemptive nature of God, and what is it about the nature of humanity that requires redemption.
Ted Kim brings us the first message in our series “The Gospel According to Exodus.” In this message, he gives an overview of the book, and talks about how this book can speak to our current circumstances.
Does Spiritual Warfare still occur today? How can we arm ourselves against it?
Many of the New Year’s Resolutions that we make stem from an internal sense of agitation that we have to constantly become more, better, and different than we currently are. What if there was a better way to start the New Year? Today we look at the Old Testament command to practice the Year of Jubilee, and how it applies to our context today.
Christmas is all about Christ making his home in us so that we could return home – to the home of God.
As we close our series, we look at the strange nature of Biblical signs. Noah got an olive branch, Moses a burning bush, the Israelites a cloud by day and fire by night. But King Ahaz? He got the strangest sign of all – and it’s good news for the entire universe.
Advent is a valley, the time between the first coming and the second. Valleys, at least in part, happen because of leadership crisis. We are more or less facing one now. And Israel was in the same predicament. But out of the shorn stump of Jesse comes a branch, a root, a shoot that will save us all.
It’s the first Sunday of Advent, that time in the church calendar when we remember the first coming of Jesus and look forward to his return. We’re following along the lectionary in the Book of Isaiah and we begin with the solid, lasting, durable nature of Biblical hope. Indeed, it’s more solid than a mountain.
To close out our “Come, Holy Spirit” series, today we consider how to go out into the world and embody the Spirit everywhere we go. This means we become people who are both naturally supernatural, and people who have the Spirit indwelled in them. How do we do this? By being vessels filled with the fruit of the Spirit.
Why sometimes people aren’t healed and why we should keep praying.
Believers in Jesus cohabitat with a powerful new roommate: The Holy Spirit. The Spirit not only gives us power to change, but makes the Gospel real to our hearts so that we become a strange kind of people: people who love radically and live in freedom.