James #1 - How does faith work when you are in a trial?
In this first sermon from the book of James, Pastor Mark preaches on faith in the midst of trials including finding joy, wisdom, and ultimately God in the middle of your trials.
In this first sermon from the book of James, Pastor Mark preaches on faith in the midst of trials including finding joy, wisdom, and ultimately God in the middle of your trials.
In this finale to the spiritual gifts series, Pastor Mark teaches on most likely the most controversial set of gifts - sign gifts - including gifts such as prophecy, speaking in tongues, healing, and miracles.
In this sermon, Pastor Mark expands upon speaking gifts like apostles, teaching, evangelism, shepherding/care, encouragement, leadership, wisdom, and knowledge.
In this sermon from Pastor Mark, he expands upon gifts of service like mercy, hospitality, discernment, helps/service, administration, giving, and faith.
In this sermon, Pastor Mark kicks off a short sermon series to help people determine their spiritual gifts and how God has uniquely designed them to serve His Kingdom. In this sermon, he talks about the Holy Spirit-filled ministry of Jesus as well as the differences between getting a gift vs using a gift, what God creates vs what Satan counterfeits, the physical body vs the church body, Christian ministry vs Christian maturity, and public vs private worship.
In this final sermon in Romans from 16:17-27, Pastor Mark preaches against division and on the difference between wise, foolish, and evil people. Ultimately, the book ends with the admonition to start with God, stay with God, and finish with God.
In Romans 16:1-16, Pastor Mark teaches a passage with a long list of names written by Paul, showing that all people are fascinating and every testimony is important.
In this sermon from Romans 15:22-33, Pastor Mark talks about plans, provision, partnership, and prayer when it comes to ministry.
In Romans 15:14-21, Pastor Mark gives qualities and characteristics of a Spirit-filled church with lots of encouragement for all God has done over the past year and few years.
In Romans 15:1-13, Pastor Mark talks about the difference between "national" and "state" borders when it comes to Christianity vs. other religions as well as how ultimately, life in the Spirit, living as diverse believers who all love Jesus, is winning.
This sermon from Pastor Mark covers Romans 14:13-23 and encourages Christians to be a help, a burden lifter, and a servant, not a hindrance, burden giver, and selfish.
In Romans 14, Pastor Mark preaches on the fact that most of the time, as a church family, relationships are more important than disagreements and that we as believers should look up to Him, not down on them.
This topical sermon for Father's Day is based in Mark and John's Gospels as Pastor Mark preaches on the special relationship between God the Father and God the Son.
This special message from Dr. R.T. Kendall is based on his life message and best-selling book "Total Forgiveness".
In this sermon from Romans 13:8-14, Pastor Mark preaches on the war between love and selfishness, the war between the Spirit and the flesh, and the best version of a person, who is in Jesus.
One of the most popular and insightful passages to study in a time of increasing conversation around social disobedience and social justice, Pastor Mark preaches from Romans 13:1-7 on how Christians can discern a course of action when God and government collide.
This sermon from Pastor Mark based in Romans 12:9-21 could be considered a string of short "tweetable" quotes from Paul on how to treat others honorably and live among people in a Godly way.
In this sermon from Romans 12:1-8, Pastor Mark talks about how we worship with our head, heart, and hands as we die to ourselves and live for God.
In this special Mother's Day sermon from Pastor Mark, he teaches from Luke 1 on motherhood lessons we can learn from Jesus' mother Mary.
This final sermon from Romans 11 starts with the idea that some things simply need to be placed in a mystery box and that we can't understand everything in Scripture, then moves on to the fact that God is faithful to generations and that God is not a concept to be mastered but a person to be worshipped.
In this sermon from Romans 11, Pastor Mark teaches on the topic of why the Jews don't love Jesus, how God grafted us into Israel, and what warning we should heed from Israel.
This sermon from Pastor Mark covers Romans 11 and the idea of a remnant, whether God rejects His people, and pruning for the next harvest.
This sermon from Pastor Mark covers the final portion of Romans 10 on predestination and addresses the question of why we should still evangelize if people are predestined, showing the importance of both divine sovereignty and human responsibility in evangelism.
This face-melting sermon from Pastor Mark goes through 1 Corinthians 15:3 in painstaking detail and emphasizes the incredible truth that Christ died for our sins.
In this Easter sermon from Pastor Mark, he goes through a 21-point list of reasons to believe that Jesus resurrected from the dead and the fact that it makes Him different than the leader of any other world religion.
In this sermon from Romans 9:30-10:13, Pastor Mark addresses the question of who chooses our salvation and whether or not predestination is loving.
In this sermon from Romans 9:14-29, Pastor Mark addresses two more questions Paul answers about predestination including whether it's unjust or unfair for some to be saved and not others using the case study of Pharaoh and his hard heart.
Pastor Mark tackles a much-debated topic of predestination in this sermon from Romans 9:1-13 and the question of whether we choose God or God chooses us and how a loving God could choose some people and not others.
In this sermon from the end of Romans 8, Pastor Mark preaches on four questions posed in the text on our security in Christ and finishes with the fact that we march forward in faith, not fear.
Many people explain why there's evil and suffering in this world in different ways. In this sermon based in Romans 8:18-30, Pastor Mark tells that, even though humankind ruined the world, there's ultimate hope in God's divine plan.