

Depression of spirit is a real struggle for many Christians. Psalm 143 may offer an excellent prayer for such times.




The liturgy and prayers for the fifth week of Lent and the sermon on Psalm 103.


Why do we give praise to God? How can such inferior creatures ever give God praise worthy of who He is? Psalm 103 calls not only the individual, but the entire cosmos to bless God. We discover that it is not God who needs our praise, but we who need to enter into His life through praise.


Praying the Psalms pluck our heartstrings, making us instruments of God. Psalm 88 is the darkest psalm in the Bible. How do we pray something so dark? Good new: this Psalm directs us directly to Christ!


The liturgy for the fourth week of Lent and the sermon from Psalm 88.


Praying the Psalms plucks our heartstrings. Psalm 63 stirs the heart's desire for God.


The liturgy for the third week in Lent and the sermon.


When we pray the Psalms, the pluck our heartstrings. In Psalm 38, God permits the suffering of sin to return our desires to Him.


Psalm 38 is a psalm of repentance and healing. This recording includes the liturgy for the second Sunday of Lent prior to the sermon.


Our Lenten series will look how to pray the psalms through the traditional six that encompass the sorrows and joys of the Christian life.


Our Lenten series will look how to pray the psalms through the traditional six that encompass the sorrows and joys of the Christian life.


The sermon with the songs and prayers beforehand.


Jesus' second sermon in Matthew sends His disciples on a mission trip. Matthew records these words to encourage us to be disciple makers.


The Sunday sermon with the liturgy included.


Matthew suggests good discipleship is similar to good shepherding.


The full service edition includes the liturgy along with the sermon. The recording ends after the sermon and does not include the liturgy of Communion.


In this experimental episode, we take you into the songs and prayers of our Sunday liturgy and right through the sermon. There are only three Sundays before Great Lent. This Sunday was the Sunday of the Publican.


The worse word a disciple can say to Jesus is "No." In this message, we look at the devotion of a colorful cast of characters and learn, along with them, to say "Yes" to Jesus in every part of our life.


Windows are meant to look through, not at. Through Jesus' miracles, the disciples get a good look through the window of God. But the religious regulators would rather criticize the window itself.


After marveling at the authority of Jesus' sermon, the crowds now see His authority in healing.


A narrative about Jesus' healing of the leper.


When Christ the King was born in Bethlehem, the Magi arrived from the East with gifts guided by a Star on high, but Herod was troubled and mowed down the children like wheat; for he lamented that his power would soon be destroyed.


The opening chapters of Hebrews make a bold claim about what Christ's partaking in our flesh and blood means.


Have you ever been disappointed by great expectations? Great expectations often produce great disappointments because the soul’s greatest longing is God. The gospel is a story of greater expectations. This Advent series “Greater Expectations” seeks to increase our anticipation for Christ because He is what the soul desires. In Christ our greatest expectation is fulfilled.


Have you ever been disappointed by great expectations? Great expectations often produce great disappointments because the soul’s greatest longing is God. The gospel is a story of greater expectations. This Advent series “Greater Expectations” seeks to increase our anticipation for Christ because He is what the soul desires. In Christ our greatest expectation is fulfilled.


Have you ever been disappointed by great expectations? Great expectations often produce great disappointments because the soul’s greatest longing is God. The gospel is a story of greater expectations. This Advent series “Greater Expectations” seeks to increase our anticipation for Christ because He is what the soul desires. In Christ our greatest expectation is fulfilled.


Have you ever been disappointed by great expectations? Great expectations often produce great disappointments because the soul’s greatest expectation is God. The gospel is a story of greater expectations. This Advent series “Greater Expectations” seeks to increase our anticipation for Christ because He is what the soul desires. In Christ our greatest expectation is fulfilled.


Ryan and Annabel Koher, our missionaries to Mozambique shares about his experience in prison and more. His message is followed by a time of question and answers.


In Jesus' conclusion to the Sermon on the Mount, He urges the importance of doing what He commands. This sermon explores the challenge of works and salvation by showing that Jesus calls us to obedience—something entirely different than works.