Lehman Ave Church of Christ

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Welcome to the podcast of the Lehman Avenue church of Christ in Bowling Green, KY. This podcast is made from audio recordings of weekly sermons presented at the church. If you live in our area or if you will be traveling to Bowling Green and are looking for a place to worship, we would be happy to…

lehmanavechurchofchrist


    • Feb 8, 2026 LATEST EPISODE
    • weekdays NEW EPISODES
    • 36m AVG DURATION
    • 1,351 EPISODES


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    Latest episodes from Lehman Ave Church of Christ

    "Finding Your Escape Route (1 Corinthians 10)" by Neal Pollard

    Play Episode Listen Later Feb 8, 2026 34:57 Transcription Available


    February 8, 2026 - Sunday AM Sermon   This episode weaves together worship, Scripture, and practical counsel as the speaker moves from congregational singing to a focused lesson on escaping the traps of sin. The episode opens with a celebration of singing after deliverance — referencing Moses and Miriam at the Red Sea and noting early Christian practice (Ephesians 5:19, Colossians 3:16). Using the modern metaphor of escape rooms, Neal frames sin as a spiritual trap: universal, persistent, and learned. Citing Psalms, Proverbs, Ecclesiastes, and Romans 3:23, he emphasizes that everyone stumbles and that ongoing struggle with sin is normal. The poem “Autobiography in Five Short Chapters” by Portia Nelson is used to illustrate stages of change and the hope of walking a different street. The core of the message draws from 1 Corinthians chapters 8–10, where Paul warns the Corinthian church about idolatry, immorality, and testing God. The speaker extracts four practical steps from Paul for breaking free: 1) avoid negative influences that lead to idolatry or immorality; 2) cultivate contentment and gratitude rather than grumbling (Philippians 4:11); 3) be honest about your vulnerability and avoid overconfidence; and 4) do not love anything or anyone more than God. Biblical examples (the Israelites' failures, Exodus 32, Numbers 25) and cultural warnings (the influence of permissive philosophies) illustrate why these steps matter. Practical next steps and pastoral counsel are offered: confess sin (1 John 1:9), seek accountability and help from others (James 5:16), and rely on God's faithfulness and the promise of a way of escape (1 Corinthians 10:13). The speaker stresses that asking for help is not weakness but humility and courage, and he encourages listeners who are spiritually lost or struggling to respond to the gospel or request further study and support. The episode closes with an appeal to stand and sing in response and a reminder that, even if you feel overwhelmed, God provides a path out — whether through private repentance, communal accountability, or the saving work of Christ. Expect Scripture-rich teaching, practical application, pastoral compassion, and invitations to worship and prayer.   Handout: FINDING YOUR ESCAPE ROUTE (1 Corinthians 10)  Neal Pollard  Introduction    A. In 1 Corinthians 8-10, Paul Writes The Corinthians To __________________ _________________    B. The ___________ Has Basic, Effective Ways To Keep Us On The _____________ Of ____________    C. To Make Your Escape....    I. _________________ NEGATIVE ___________________ (1-9)    A. Paul Uses ________________ As An Example To The Corinthians    II. BE ______________ WITH WHAT YOU _______________ (10)    III. BE _______________ WITH ____________________ (12)    A. We Think We're _________________ And We Don't ______________; We _______________    IV. DON'T ______________ ANYONE/ANYTHING _______________ THAN ________________ (14)    Conclusion    A. We Can _________________ Any _________________ Problem (13)!  Duration 34:58

    "A Study of 2 Corinthians" by Neal Pollard - Part 9

    Play Episode Listen Later Feb 8, 2026 44:28 Transcription Available


    February 8, 2026 - Sunday AM Bible Class In this episode we work through 2 Corinthians chapter 7 and preview the giving passages coming in chapters 8–9. Neal walks the class through Paul's pastoral heart for the Corinthian church, his defense of ministry, and the way corrective rebuke (Paul's earlier letter) produced godly sorrow that led to repentance. Listeners will hear how Titus's encouraging report confirmed real change in Corinth and refreshed Paul and his coworkers. Topics covered include the distinction between godly sorrow and worldly sorrow, the spiritual blessings that Christians supply to one another (comfort, accountability, confidence, affection, joy, and mutual repentance), and how healthy church relationships reflect heaven's priorities. The talk draws connections to Old and New Testament examples (Melchizedek and Abraham's tithe, Barnabas in Acts, the widow's offering Jesus noticed, Malachi's challenge) to show how God works through people and how gratitude should flow into sharing and generosity. Practical application is emphasized: what true repentance looks like in community, why accountability and encouragement matter, and how faithful, sacrificial giving flows from trust in God rather than mere obligation. The speaker also touches on congregational vision and the role of elders in motivating outward-focused ministry and stewardship. Key takeaways for listeners: the church family is a primary channel of God's comfort and correction; genuine sorrow produces lasting change; and generous giving is a spiritual response that demonstrates trust in God.   Duration 44:28

    "Deuteronomy" by Andy Wright Part 5

    Play Episode Listen Later Feb 8, 2026 43:50 Transcription Available


    January 7, 2026 - Wednesday PM Bible Class   This episode is a classroom-style exploration of Deuteronomy focused on the biblical theme of remembrance. The speaker (a teacher/sermon leader) walks listeners through verses that repeatedly command Israel to "remember" or "not forget," examining what the Israelites were to recall—deliverance from Egypt, God's mighty acts (plagues, the Red Sea, manna, provision of water, etc.), covenant promises, their provocations (complaints, the golden calf), and the warning about Amalek. The class includes interactive questions and comments from attendees, which help surface practical questions about justice, proportionality, and how Old Testament commands apply today. Key points covered include: the importance of remembering God's acts to keep dependence on God rather than self; the obligation to remember past weakness so the community shows compassion to the powerless; the instruction to remember Amalek as a reminder that God's justice will come; and warnings that forgetfulness leads to idolatry, arrogance, and disobedience. The speaker connects these Old Covenant themes to the New Covenant—drawing parallels between Israel's deliverance from Egypt and our deliverance from sin in Christ, the continuing consequences of provoking God, and the call to faithful covenant-keeping. Practical applications and takeaways are emphasized: study Scripture so you can remember what you've been taught; share the testimony of eyewitnesses and historical evidence for faith; hate the sin but love the sinner; live as pilgrims who anticipate God's justice and salvation; and keep God's love at the center of remembrance. The episode ends with pastoral encouragement to remain faithful, remember God's past faithfulness, and live in hope as you await Christ's return. Duration 43:20

    "Deuteronomy" by Andy Wright Part 4

    Play Episode Listen Later Feb 5, 2026 42:30 Transcription Available


    December 30, 2025 - Wednesday PM Bible Class In this episode of the Deuteronomy class, the instructor leads a topical study on idolatry as presented throughout Deuteronomy. Using key passages (including Deut. 4, 7, 9, 29, and the Song of Moses in 32), the class explores the Bible's repeated commands against idols and carved images, the story of the golden calf, and the specific injunctions to destroy pagan altars and statuary. The lecture includes close readings of Deut. 29:17 and 32:21 (God's jealousy over foolish idols), Deut. 4:15–16 (the prohibition on making any form to represent God), and Deut. 7:5, 25 and 9:12 (commands and historical reminders of Israel's failure). The session surveys why idolatry mattered historically and why God fiercely opposed it: pagan gods were false and devotion to them was wasted; pagan worship practices (documented by other ancient writers like Herodotus) could be destructive — including child sacrifice, ritual sex, and self-harm; and images diminish and misrepresent the incomparable Creator. The golden calf episode is used as a prime example of how quickly a people can turn to crafted representations and how images box God into a limited, misleading form. Class discussion connects these Old Testament teachings to the New Covenant: Jesus is presented as the true image of the invisible God (Colossians 1:15), and incidents like Jesus cleansing the temple are read as condemnations of anything that robs God of exclusive worship. Andy also draws practical, contemporary parallels — warning that modern “idols” can be careers, money, comfort, entertainment, or even devotion to a hobby or brand — and challenges listeners to examine what competes for God's place in their lives. Format and contributors: this is a recorded classroom lecture with interactive Q&A between the instructor and students. Key takeaways include God's demand for exclusive devotion, the theological reasons images are forbidden, historical evidence of pagan practices, and concrete prompts for personal reflection and repentance in light of both Old and New Testament teaching. Duration 42:30

    "How We Know He is the Lord" by Hiram Kemp

    Play Episode Listen Later Feb 2, 2026 38:09 Transcription Available


    February 1, 2026   In this episode the speaker offers a sermon-style, verse-by-verse exploration of the book of Exodus, arguing that the whole book is designed to reveal who God truly is. Using the recurring phrase "so that they may know that I am the Lord," the message traces how God introduces himself to both Israel and Egypt through deliverance, mighty signs, provision, and dwelling among his people. The talk is grounded in specific Exodus passages (including chapters 6–17, 25–40) and connects Old Testament events to New Testament fulfilment and Christian experience. Topics covered include God as Deliverer (the Exodus rescue and its theological implications), demonstrations of divine Power and Mighty Works (the plagues, the Red Sea, and the role of miracles), Gods removal of Calamity (the frogs episode and the distinction between signs and true authority), and Sanctification (how God sets his people apart). The episode also treats the importance of Remembering and Teaching Gods acts to future generations, Gods Provision in the wilderness (manna and water from the rock), Gods dwelling with his people (the tabernacle and the promise of Emmanuel), and the gift of Rest (the Sabbath and the rest found in Christ). Hiram draws on a wide range of biblical cross-references and examples — including Job, the Psalms, Isaiah, the Gospels, Acts, Paul's testimony, Peter's deliverance, and the healing in John 9 — to show continuity between Exodus and the whole biblical story. Contemporary illustrations and testimonies appear as well: John Newtons conversion at sea, Tilly Smiths tsunami warning, and modern reflections on providence, evangelism, and perseverance in faith. Key takeaways emphasize that Exodus is more than history or national origin: it is theological and transformational. Listeners will hear seven major ways the episode argues we know God is Lord — he delivers, displays power, removes calamity, sanctifies his people, commands remembrance, provides for needs, dwells with his people, and offers rest — and how each of these motifs applies to Christian life today, including the assurance of salvation, baptismal invitation, and the call to tell others. The tone is pastoral and invitational. The speaker repeatedly connects ancient narratives to present-day faith practice (noting relevance even for listeners in 2026), encourages the hearing of Scripture as a means of transformation rather than mere information, and closes with an invitation for listeners to respond: to confess faith, be baptized, request prayer, or pursue further study with the church. Expect a clear, sermon-driven exposition that blends careful biblical reading, applied theology, memorable illustrations, and practical next steps for faith: how Gods acts in Exodus point us to Jesus, assure us of Gods ongoing presence, and invite us into rest and mission.   Handout:  How We Know He is the LORD — Hiram Kemp    1. He _________________ His _________________ (Exodus 6:6-7, 7:5)    2.   His ___________________ & ____________________ Works (Exodus 7:17)    3.   He ____________________ ___________________ (Exodus 8:8-10)    4.   He ______________ His _______________ (Exodus 8:22, 11:7)    5.   His _______________ must be ______________ & _____________ (Exodus 10:1-2)    6.   He ______________ for _______________ (Exodus 16:4-6, 16:12)    7.   He ______________ with His _____________ (Exodus 29:45-46)    8.   He ____________ Us _____________ (Exodus 31:12-13)   Duration 38:10

    "Three Words to Use With Change" by Neal Pollard and Hiram Kemp

    Play Episode Listen Later Feb 1, 2026 35:44 Transcription Available


    February 1, 2026 - Sunday AM Bible Class   In this episode a pastoral sermon addresses the reality of change—in personal life, in the church, and in the spiritual life—while celebrating a momentous shift in local leadership. Speakers reflect on recent transitions (the appointment of new elders), offer biblical perspective, and give practical guidance for how a congregation should respond. The message draws on scripture and church history—Peter's Pentecost sermon, the inclusion of Cornelius and the Gentiles, Hebrews, Acts 20 and 1 Peter—to show how spiritual change is both God-ordained and costly. Listeners will hear how believers are called to view themselves as strangers and pilgrims, why the gospel remains unchanging, and how growth inevitably brings organizational shifts. Neal lays out a three-word framework for healthy change: anticipate, analyze, accept. He illustrates these points with personal anecdotes (a difficult 1,150-mile move and a long-standing building relocation) and memorable stories—the Grady Nutt radio tale, the railroad gauge history, and an airline crew-resource-management example—to highlight why some traditions persist and when change is necessary. Hiram closes by focusing on constants that never change and four elder responsibilities that endure: elders must watch themselves, guard the flock, be honored and obeyed, and remember the Chief Shepherd. These points are grounded in passages such as Acts 20, 1 Peter 5, Hebrews 13, and John 14 and include modern analogies (cybersecurity and pastoral oversight) to show how elders protect and shepherd the congregation. Practical takeaways include how the church can support and submit to shepherding leadership, how to evaluate changes biblically rather than reactively, and why spiritual stability rests on unchanging truths about Christ. The episode ends with an invitation to respond to the gospel—repentance and baptism for the forgiveness of sins—and a closing song.   Handout: THREE WORDS TO USE WITH "CHANGE" — Neal Pollard  Introduction    A. The _______________ Began With A Dramatic _________________    B. This Church Has Been Through A Lot Of _________________    C. Let's Consider 3 Things About Change As We Install New Elders:    I. _________________________ CHANGE    II. __________________________ CHANGE    III. _________________________ CHANGE     4 Responsibilities that Don't Change — Hiram Kemp  1. __________________ must ____________________ themselves (Acts 20:28)    2. ___________________ must __________________ the _________________ (1 Peter 5:2)    3. ________________ must be _________________ & _______________ (Hebrews 13:17)    4. ________________ must __________________ the __________________ Shepherd (1 Peter 5:4)    Duration 35:45

    "A Study of 2 Corinthians" by Neal Pollard - Part 8

    Play Episode Listen Later Feb 1, 2026 43:29 Transcription Available


    February 1, 2026 - Sunday AM Bible Class   In this class-style episode we work through 2 Corinthians chapters 6 and 7. Neal leads an interactive Bible study with contributions from class members tracing Paul's transition from defending his ministry to calling the Corinthians to holy living. The session reviews the background: Paul's fruitful 18 months in Corinth, the rise of unnamed critics or “false apostles,” and why this second letter was necessary. The discussion highlights Paul's central appeal—echoing Isaiah—that now is the acceptable time and the day of salvation and urges listeners not to “receive the grace of God in vain.” The teacher unpacks what that can look like today: wrong motivation in coming to Christ, failing to persevere, a lack of life-change, or turning to a false gospel. Practical Scripture connections (1 Corinthians 15, Hebrews, Galatians, Isaiah 49) are made to show the urgency and value of genuine conversion and perseverance. From 2 Corinthians 6:3–13 the class examines how Paul commends his ministry: lists of difficulties endured (endurance, afflictions, beatings, imprisonments, sleeplessness, hunger), spiritual attributes displayed (purity, knowledge, patience, kindness, the Holy Spirit, genuine love, truth, the power of God), and the contrasting situations that prove faithful service (glory and dishonor, good report and evil report, dying yet living). These elements are shown as evidence of ministers cooperating with God and submitting themselves to inspection. The teacher then turns to verses 14–7:1 and unpacks Paul's call to separation from unbelievers and ungodly influence. The class covers the practical implications of “What fellowship has light with darkness?”—how relationships, partnerships, and associations shape spiritual life. The emphasis is on discerning who influences you, avoiding relationships or commitments that pull you from Christ, and prioritizing your identity as God's people. Throughout, the episode balances theology and application: how to spot false teaching, the role of motives in baptism and discipleship, the necessity of transformation (2 Corinthians 3:18), and the tension of being in the world but not of it (John 17). The teacher challenges listeners to keep hearts open, to forgive and love despite risk, and to pursue holiness so that they may receive God's promises as sons and daughters. Listeners should expect a thoughtful exposition of Paul's argument, interactive Q&A moments from class participants, practical examples for modern Christian living, and clear takeaways about perseverance, accountability, and the importance of right fellowship within the church.   Duration 43:30

    "Deuteronomy" by Andy Wright Part 3

    Play Episode Listen Later Feb 1, 2026 35:52 Transcription Available


    December 23, 2025 - Wednesday PM Bible Class   This episode is a recorded Deuteronomy class focusing on the blessings in Deuteronomy 28 (primarily verses 1–14). Led by the instructor with interactive student participation and readings, the session compares the structure of blessings to the curses covered in a previous lesson and highlights key scriptural and theological themes. Topics covered include the covenant framework and conditional pattern (“if you obey, then you will be blessed”), the parallel structure between the comprehensive curses and blessings, and the specific locations tied to the proclamation of blessings (Mount Gerizim) — including a brief cultural note linking Mount Gerizim to the Samaritan woman at the well. The discussion unpacks how the blessings touch every area of life (city and field, health, family, work, harvest, livestock, coming and going) and explains the mix of natural consequences (e.g., health and Sabbath rest improving productivity) and divine intervention (e.g., victory over enemies, providence for rain and harvest). Practical examples like Sabbath rest, the lending/borrowing relationship, and the “head not the tail” image are emphasized. Historical examples are surveyed — the conquest under Joshua, the cycles in Judges, and the faithfulness/decline under the kings — to show that God both promised and enacted blessings when Israel was obedient. A major theological point is stressed: while the curses list many specific violations, the blessings call for wholehearted obedience to all God's commands, warning against selective or partial obedience. The class then moves to New Testament application: Jesus is presented as the one who perfectly obeyed the covenant and thus fulfilled the blessings of Deuteronomy. Because Christ earned what Israel could not, he secures and shares those ultimate blessings with believers by grace. The session closes with pastoral and practical implications: obedience aligns us with God's generous desire to bless (without endorsing a prosperity gospel), grace covers our inability to obey perfectly, and faithfulness matters under the new covenant. Listeners can expect a mix of exegetical teaching, scriptural readings, historical illustration, classroom Q&A, and a Christ-centered theological application tying Old Testament promises to their fulfillment in Jesus. Duration 35:52

    "A Study of 2 Corinthians" by Neal Pollard - Part 7

    Play Episode Listen Later Feb 1, 2026 43:58 Transcription Available


    January 18, 2026 - Sunday AM Bible Class   This episode is a classroom-style study of 2 Corinthians chapter 5, part of an ongoing series under the theme “Christianity is personal.” Neal walks listeners through verses 11–21, unpacking Paul's defense of ministry and the biblical motivations that move Christians to share the gospel. The session includes live interaction with congregants and a short testimony from Clay, a recent convert, illustrating the real-life impact of hospitality and witness. Topics covered include: persuasion as the central task of evangelism; six motivators that drive gospel witness (the terror of the Lord, personal integrity, the love of Christ, the transforming power of reconciliation, the ambassadorial responsibility to plead for others, and the gift of righteousness in Christ); and the ministry threads connecting chapters 3–5 (new covenant, Spirit, righteousness, and reconciliation). Neal highlights four groups named in the passage — “we” (Paul and co-workers), “you” (the faithful in the church), “those” (the critics/false teachers), and “they/all” (the lost world) — and explains how the passage applies to each. Practical advice emphasizes building rapport, patient teaching (not starting with condemnation), defending gospel integrity through godly character, and allowing Christ's love to compel us to speak. Key takeaways and action points: persuasion is meant to be a way of life, not merely a program; believers are entrusted with the ministry of reconciliation and act as God's ambassadors; we should pray intentionally (the speaker challenges listeners to write three names and pray for opportunities to share the gospel); and the hope of righteousness in Christ should motivate compassionate, courageous evangelism. Listeners can expect careful exegesis, pastoral application, practical evangelism tips, and encouragement for personal growth in witness. No outside guest speakers are featured beyond congregational interactions and Clay's testimony; the episode primarily centers on Scripture-driven teaching and concrete next steps for the local church. Duration 43:59

    "Deuteronomy" by Andy Wright Part 2

    Play Episode Listen Later Feb 1, 2026 31:25 Transcription Available


    December 17, 2025 - Wednesday PM Bible Class   This episode is a topical Deuteronomy class on curses and their consequences, led by a teacher with interactive audience discussion. The speaker begins by defining what a biblical curse is—how it differs from modern use—and gives everyday analogies (like the childhood rhyme “cross my heart and hope to die”) to show that a curse pronounces real consequences for specific behavior. The episode walks through the cluster of curses in Deuteronomy 27 (verses 15–26), explaining the offenses named there: idolatry; dishonoring parents; moving boundary markers (stealing); leading the blind astray; perverting justice for foreigners, orphans and widows; various prohibited sexual relationships; secret attacks on neighbors; bribery and murder; and the broad curse on anyone who fails to observe the law. Andy clarifies the social and legal reasons behind several items (for instance, why moving landmarks mattered) and offers biblical examples and trivia—Jeroboam's calf-worship, Naboth's vineyard, Gideon's family—to show these sins did occur in Israel's history. Next the class examines the consequences set out in Deuteronomy 28 (beginning verse 15), surveying the long list of curses: agricultural failure, disease (consumption, fever, tumors, boils), military defeat, exile, economic ruin, social collapse and more. The speaker distinguishes between natural consequences (e.g., disease spreading when purity laws are ignored) and divine interventions (e.g., exile and enforced idolatry), and points out historical fulfillment in the cycles of Judges, the divided monarchy, and the Assyrian and Babylonian captivities. Audience questions and examples (including Job) are used to nuance the theology: not all suffering is direct punishment for sin, though disobedience can and did bring judgment. The class closes by connecting these Old Testament curses to the new covenant: God's seriousness about sin, the reality that God enforces moral law, and the gospel solution. The teacher highlights Deuteronomy 21:23—"he who is hanged on a tree is accursed"—as prophetic, observing that Christ bore the curse deserved by humanity so believers can be freed from the divine consequences of sin. Listeners can expect a clear, example-rich unpacking of the texts, historical parallels, pastoral insight about suffering and judgment, and practical application for living under God's covenant in light of Christ's sacrifice.   Duration 31:25

    "Deuteronomy" by Andy Wright Part 1

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 19, 2026 36:14 Transcription Available


    December 10, 2025 - Wednesday PM Bible Class In this opening lecture for a new quarter-long class held in the auditorium, the instructor provides a lively, topical overview of the book of Deuteronomy. Rather than proceeding chapter-by-chapter, the course will draw out lasting lessons and themes from Deuteronomy; this episode sets the stage by answering the basic who, what, when, where, how, and why questions and by sharing several trivia-style facts to engage students. The episode covers authorship and audience (Moses as the primary speaker, with the final chapter likely recorded by another; addressed to the generation raised in the wilderness on the plains of Moab), dating (placed roughly between 1446 and 1406 BC in many traditions), and the meaning of the title (from the Greek Septuagint meaning a “second” giving of the law). The instructor also explains Deuteronomy's place as the fifth book of the Pentateuch/Torah and notes practical manuscript facts—34 chapters, 959 verses, chapter 28 as the longest, chapter 34 as the shortest, first-word and last-word markers—and how frequently Jesus quotes from Deuteronomy. Major themes highlighted include the Shema and the call to love God with all heart, soul, and strength; a second reiteration of the law; warnings against idolatry; guidance for kingship; God's faithfulness in provision; commands to remember and obey; and the covenantal structure of blessings for obedience and curses for disobedience. The instructor emphasizes Moses passing leadership to Joshua as a crucial narrative moment and points to Deuteronomy 18:18 as an early messianic promise pointing beyond the law. The lecture also sets out how the Old Testament, and Deuteronomy specifically, functions for Christians today: as example and instruction (1 Corinthians 10:6), as Scripture profitable for teaching, reproof, correction and training in righteousness (2 Timothy 3:16–17), and as a means of revealing sin and pointing to the need for Christ (Romans and Galatians references). The instructor explains that while Christians are under the new covenant, studying the law helps us understand sin, God's plan, and the coming of the Messiah. Format and tone: the class promises an interactive, accessible approach with occasional trivia, classroom discussion, and successive sessions that focus more narrowly on key topics such as idolatry, covenant obedience, blessings and curses, and the relationship between the Old and New Covenants. There are no outside guests—this episode is led by the course instructor with student participation—ending on an upbeat note as the group prepares for deeper study in later sessions.   Duration 36:14

    "When The Lord Looks at His Church (Rev. 2:18-29)" by Neal Pollard

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 19, 2026 37:34


    January 19, 2026 - Sunday PM Sermon   When The Lord Looks at His Church (Rev. 2:18-29) — Neal Pollard    I. HE _________________________ (18)    II HE _________________________ (19-20)    III. HE ________________________ (21-23)    IV. HE ________________________ (24-25)    V. HE ________________________ (26-28)    VI. HE HAS THE __________________ __________________ (29)    Duration 37:35

    "God's Blueprint for the Church (Ephesians 4:11-24)" by Hiram Kemp

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 18, 2026 32:11


    January 19, 2026 - Sunday AM Sermon   God's Blueprint for the Church (Ephesians 4:11-24) — Hiram Kemp  1. _______________ with ________________ ________________ (Ephesians 4:11)    2. _____________ Equipped for ______________ (Ephesians 4:12)    3. ___________________ Spiritual _________________ (Ephesians 4:13-14)    4. Reflect ____________________ in ____________________ (Ephesians 4:15-16)    5. Get ___________________ of _________________ Ways (Ephesians 4:17-22)    6. Live ______________________ Lives (Ephesians 4:23-24)    Duration 32:11

    "A Study of 2 Corinthians" by Neal Pollard - Part 6

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 18, 2026 41:44 Transcription Available


    January 11, 2026 - Sunday AM Bible Class   In this episode we continue a Bible class through 2 Corinthians, focusing on chapters 4 and 5 with an emphasis on ministry (diakonos) and Christian leadership. The class explores why Paul frames his defense of ministry as a larger treatise on service, answering accusations from false apostles and explaining who God can use for service. Key topics covered include the biblical meaning of ministry and the qualities God uses in servants: integrity of character, humility (recognizing adequacy comes from God), durability (perseverance under pressure), and spiritual stability expressed as faith. Practical applications to church leadership and everyday personal leadership are discussed throughout. The episode also examines the rewards and perspective God gives to faithful servants. Using Paul's contrasts between the temporal and the eternal, the class traces three primary blessings: (1) a promised new body and eternal home beyond our "tent" of flesh; (2) present courage and hope supplied by the Spirit as a pledge, enabling believers to walk by faith, not sight; and (3) confident standing before the judgment seat of Christ, knowing deeds will be recompensed and that a life lived to please God matters. Illustrations and pastoral application pepper the teaching — from tent‑camping imagery to references to Job, James, Ephesians, and other New Testament passages — all aimed at helping listeners reframe suffering as "light and momentary" compared with eternal glory. The class closes by previewing the next session's topic (motives for sharing Christ) and reiterates the call to persevere in faithful service.   Duration 41:44

    "The Prison Epistles" by Chris Young Part 12

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 18, 2026 35:51 Transcription Available


    December 3, 2025 - Wednesday PM Bible Class   In this episode we finish our quarter by working through Colossians chapter 1 and beginning chapter 2, part of the New Testament prison epistles. The speaker situates Colossae geographically and historically, explains the city's relationship to nearby Laodicea and Hierapolis, and explores the background of false teachings infiltrating the church there — including Judaizing legalism, Greek philosophical influences, and early elements of Gnostic thought. Chapter 1 is examined in depth as a doctrinally rich celebration of Christ's supremacy: his deity, role in creation, relationship to the church, victory over death, and the fullness of the Godhead dwelling in him (verses 15–20). The episode highlights key themes such as the preeminence, authority, and all-sufficiency of Jesus Christ (with verse 18 as the chapter's bellwether), and explains reconciliation through Christ's blood (verses 20–23), stressing the conditional nature of remaining reconciled — continuing steadfastly in the faith. The teacher draws parallels to Ephesians and Matthew 24, emphasizing how the gospel had spread to “every creature under heaven” by Paul's day, and explains Paul's role as a steward of the revealed “mystery” that Gentiles are fellow heirs in Christ. Practical preaching principles from Colossians (warning and teaching) are outlined, and the episode concludes with an overview of chapter 2 warnings against deceptive philosophy, legalistic observance of festivals and Sabbaths, and angelic worship. Listeners can expect a mix of historical context, careful exposition of key verses, doctrinal clarification, and pastoral application aimed at helping Christians recognize and resist false teaching while remaining rooted, built up, and steadfast in Christ. The episode encourages listeners to read the short book of Colossians (four chapters) and Philemon to complete the study of the prison epistles.   Duration 35:51

    "Know Your Enemy: Lessons from Ephesians" by Hiram Kemp

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 12, 2026 33:16


    January 11, 2026 - Sunday PM Sermon    Know Your Enemy: Lessons from Ephesians — Hiram Kemp    1. _________________ Reigns Supreme Over ________________ (Ephesians 1:20–23)    2. The __________________ Works Through ________________ (Ephesians 2:1–3)    3. Never ___________________ the __________________ an _________________ (Ephesians 4:27)    4. __________________ in the Light ____________________ Him (Ephesians 5:6–12)    5. God's __________________ Is Necessary for _____________________ (Ephesians 6:10–11)    6. We Are _____________________ in Spiritual __________________________ (Ephesians 6:12)   Duration 33:17

    "Dealing With Disillusionment (2 Corinthians)" by Neal Pollard

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 11, 2026 34:09


    January 11, 2026 - Sunday AM Sermon   Dealing With Disillusionment (2 Corinthians) — Neal Pollard    I. REALIZE THAT _________ GOD DOESN'T MAKE US ________ FROM _________    II. WE MUST LEARN TO PROPERLY _____________ _______________    III. SEE THINGS FROM A ______________ & NOT AN _____________ FOCUS    IV. CHECK YOUR ______________ FOR __________________ GOD    V. ACCEPT THAT ___________ MORE MEANS ___________ ___________ MORE    VI.  LET ______________ TEACH _______________ & NOT ______________   Duration 34:10  

    "A Study of 2 Corinthians" by Neal Pollard - Part 5

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 11, 2026 43:36 Transcription Available


    January 4, 2026 - Sunday AM Bible Class   In this class on 2 Corinthians (primarily chapter 4 with a look toward chapter 5), the class explores what it means to be ministers of the new covenant and who God chooses to use in service. The session opens with a careful exposition of Paul's language: the frequent use of the Greek word family diakoneo/diakonos (servant/ministry) and the contrast between the ministry of life in Christ versus a ministry of death presented by false teachers. Key teaching points include: the character of those God uses (perseverance, a good conscience, and openness), the humility of God's servants ("treasure in earthen vessels"—the surpassing power belongs to God), and the durability of Christian service (afflicted but not crushed; persecuted but not abandoned). The speaker draws on Paul's life and sufferings—beatings, shipwrecks, and trials—as the model for steadfast ministry, emphasizes not waiting for perfection before serving, and warns against being a stumbling block by tampering with God's word or acting craftily.   Practical applications and leadership lessons are given throughout: leaders should model integrity and transparency, avoid adding unnecessary rules that hinder others, and view setbacks as opportunities for God's refining work. Anecdotes (including references to Paul, gospel preacher George Bailey, and a longtime elder named Russell Young) illustrate humility, unselfishness, and how God uses ordinary, fragile people to reveal Christ's life to others.   Listeners can expect expository Bible teaching, concrete examples of ministry in adversity, encouragement to serve despite weakness, and actionable advice for both personal discipleship and church leadership. The class concludes by noting that God not only calls servants but also provides grace and strengthening for those who remain faithful in service.   Duration 43:36

    "The Prison Epistles" by Chris Young Part 11

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 11, 2026 42:51 Transcription Available


    November 19, 2025 - Wednesday PM Bible Class In this episode we continue the study of the prison epistles, finishing Philippians and beginning Colossians. The host recaps Philippians' central theme — that Christ and his gospel, not life's circumstances, are the source of Christian joy — and highlights Paul's gratitude for the Philippians' faith, generosity, and encouragement, even noting the reach of the gospel into Caesar's household while Paul was under house arrest. Shifting to Colossians, the episode covers historical and geographical background (Colossae in Phrygia, its proximity to Ephesus, Laodicea, and Hierapolis), questions about Paul's direct involvement in that church's founding, and likely sources of the congregation's problems. The host outlines the structure and twin-epistle relationship with Ephesians: the first two chapters are doctrinal and the final two chapters are practical. He identifies the main false teachings Paul confronts — Judaizing legalism and early forms of Gnosticism — and explains Paul's emphasis on the preeminence, sufficiency, and deity of Christ. The episode walks through Colossians 1 in detail: thanksgiving for the church's faith, love, and hope; prayer requests for spiritual wisdom and worthy living; and the central doctrine that Christ is supreme — over God, creation, the church, and death — and that through him believers are reconciled and redeemed by his blood. Scriptural connections are made to Mark, John, Romans, Ephesians, and 1 Corinthians to illuminate Paul's claims about Christ's role in creation, reconciliation, and resurrection. Listeners can expect careful exposition, pastoral application (faith, hope, love; bearing fruit; walking worthy), and encouragement to read Colossians for themselves. The episode closes emphasizing the transformative contrast from darkness to light and the all-sufficiency of Christ for the church amid false teaching.   Duration 42:51

    "The Heart of His Story (Isaiah 53)" by Neal Pollard

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 5, 2026 30:50


    January 4, 2026 - Sunday PM Sermon   THE HEART OF HIS STORY (Isaiah 53)  Neal Pollard  I. THERE IS ______________________________ (1-3)    II. THERE IS ______________________________ (4-6)    III. THERE IS ____________________________ (4-10)    IV. THERE IS ___________________________ (11-12)   Duration 30:50

    "Christlike Service" by Neal Pollard and Hiram Kemp

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 4, 2026 35:09


    January 4, 2026 - Sunday AM Sermon   WHAT PREVENTS CHRISTLIKE SERVICE (Mark 10:35-41)  Neal Pollard  I. PUTTING _____________________ DESIRES ____________________ (35-36)    II. _______________________________ (37)    III. ______________________________ (38-40)    IV. _______________________________ PROBLEMS (41)    SELFLESS SERVICE (Mark 10:42-45)   Hiram Kemp  1. __________________ the ___________________ Model for ___________________ (Mark 10:42-43)    2. _______________ Choose the ______________________ _____________________ (Mark 10:43-44)    3. ___________________ in _______________________ _________________________ (Mark 10:45)   Duration 35:09

    "A Study of 2 Corinthians" by Neal Pollard - Part 4

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 4, 2026 42:26 Transcription Available


    December 28, 2025 - Sunday AM Bible Class   In this episode we continue a textual study through 2 Corinthians with the central theme that "Christianity is personal." The speaker walks listeners through Paul's personal relationship with the Corinthian church, his pastoral care and corrective discipline in 1 Corinthians, and the personal attacks Paul faces from unnamed false apostles. The discussion reviews chapters 1–2 and then focuses on 2 Corinthians 3:1–18, where Paul defends his apostolic authority and shifts to contrast his ministry with that of the critics. The episode highlights Paul's metaphor of the Corinthians as his living letter of recommendation — "written not with ink but with the Spirit" — and explains how their transformed lives in a sinful city prove the authenticity of his ministry. The speaker unpacks Paul's major contrast between the old covenant (the letter engraved on stone, associated with Moses and a fading glory) and the new covenant (the Spirit, which gives life and brings boldness, liberty, and transformation). Scriptural cross-references and background drawn on in the teaching include Jeremiah 31, Exodus (Moses' shining face and the Ten Commandments), 1 Corinthians, Acts, Galatians, Hebrews, and passages that point forward to Christ (e.g., Isaiah and the Psalms). The sermon explains the idea of the "veil" — how prior allegiances, traditions, or false teachings can harden hearts and obscure the gospel — and emphasizes that the veil is removed only by turning to the Lord and by the work of the Spirit. Key takeaways include: Paul's authority is validated by the transformed Corinthian believers; the old covenant as an end in itself is a "ministry of death," while the gospel of Christ is a ministry of the Spirit that gives life; the unveiled gospel produces hope, boldness, liberty, and ongoing transformation; and practical application calls believers to remove any veils — traditions, additional requirements, or hardened attitudes — that keep them or others from seeing and obeying the gospel in its purity. Listeners can expect clear exposition of 2 Corinthians 3, historical and biblical context, pastoral application for personal and communal faithfulness, and a call to embrace the liberating, life-giving ministry of the Spirit in the new covenant.   Duration 42:26

    "The Prison Epistles" by Chris Young Part 10

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 4, 2026 44:34 Transcription Available


    November 12, 2025 - Wednesday PM Bible Class   This episode walks through the closing chapters of the Book of Philippians, part of Paul's prison epistles (Ephesians, Philippians, Colossians, Philemon). The host reviews Philippians 3–4, explains the letter's central theme that true Christian joy comes from Christ and the gospel — not from changing circumstances — and ties Paul's teaching to related passages (Galatians, 1 Thessalonians, 1 Corinthians, Proverbs, Matthew, John, and 2 Corinthians). Key topics include Paul's warning about Judaizing teachers who mix law and Gospel; the call to “press on” toward spiritual maturity; the contrast between earthly focus and heavenly citizenship; the hope and mechanics of the Second Coming and the resurrection body; and how these doctrines shape Christian joy and perseverance. The episode also unpacks practical counsel from Philippians 4: unity in the congregation (an appeal to Euodia and Syntyche), gentleness and reasonableness, and combatting anxiety by bringing requests to God with thanksgiving. The host highlights the promise that God's peace will guard hearts and minds and gives a concrete mental-health-style prescription: meditate on what is true, noble, just, pure, lovely, of good report, virtuous, and praiseworthy. Paul's teaching on contentment is emphasized — learning to be content in every circumstance and relying on Christ's strength — with a brief look at the thorn-in-the-flesh passage in 2 Corinthians as context for perseverance. The episode includes reflections, Scripture cross-references, and interaction with listeners, and notes that Neal substituted last week and delivered a complementary sermon on anxiety and prayer. Listeners can expect theology tied to practical application: how to guard the heart, pursue unity, replace anxiety with prayer and thanksgiving, and cultivate joyful contentment grounded in Christ.   Duration 44:34

    "Four Faces of Providence in Ruth: Love (Chapter Four)" by Neal Pollard

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 29, 2025 32:29


    December 28, 2025 - Sunday PM Sermon   FOUR FACES OF PROVIDENCE: LOVE (Ruth 4)  Neal Pollard    I. THIS LOVING REDEEMER HAD THE __________________ (2:1)    II. THIS LOVING REDEEMER HAD ____________________ (2:4-18)    III. THIS LOVING REDEEMER HAD THE ___________________ (ch. 3)    IV. THIS LOVING REDEEMER HAD THE _______ TO MAKE IT ___________ (4:1-12)    Duration 32:30

    "When Jesus Returns… (2 Peter 3)" by Hiram Kemp

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 28, 2025 33:51


    December 28, 2025 - Sunday AM Sermon   When Jesus Returns… (2 Peter 3)   Hiram Kemp    1. _______________ Will Be _________________ (2 Peter 3:1-7)    2. God's _______________ Will _______________ to an ___________ (2 Peter 3:8-9)    3. His _____________ Will ____________ a __________________ (2 Peter 3:10)    4. The ____________ World ___________ Be _______________ (2 Peter 3:7, 3:10-12)    5. New ______________ and New _____________ Will _____________ (2 Peter 3:13)    6. Every _______________ Will Be _______________ (2 Peter 3:7, 3:14)    7. Jesus _______________ Will ____________ Glorified _____________ (2 Peter 3:18)   Duration 33:51

    "A Study of 2 Corinthians" by Neal Pollard - Part 3

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 28, 2025 40:50 Transcription Available


    December 21, 2025 - Sunday AM Bible Class   This episode resumes a study of 2 Corinthians 2 as Neal unpacks why the Apostle Paul delayed his return to Corinth, how he defends his apostolic authority, and how the church should respond to repentance and restoration. Using the background from Acts and 1 Corinthians 5, the lesson situates Paul's letter in the timeline of his missionary journeys, explains the likely presence of false apostles and Judaizing critics, and recounts the specific disciplinary case of the man who lived with his father's wife. The class explores two primary reasons Paul gives for not coming sooner: changing plans directed by the Lord and a pastoral desire not to cause the congregation additional sorrow until they had processed corrective discipline. The speaker walks through 2 Corinthians 2:5–11 in detail, highlighting Paul's four practical instructions to the church after the penitent's return—forgive, comfort, reaffirm love, and be obedient—and Paul's personal example of forgiveness to prevent Satan from taking advantage of the situation. Listeners will hear discussion of key pastoral and practical themes: how to implement restorative discipline, the distinction between forgiveness and comfort, the role of godly sorrow in producing repentance, and the dangers of mishandling public sin. Class participants contribute practical reflections; Titus's report to Paul is noted as the confirming news about the church's response. The episode then broadens into leadership principles drawn from Paul's closing remarks: common distractions leaders face, the image of church leaders as an "aroma" that attracts some and repels others, the limits of human sufficiency and dependence on God's grace, and proper motives—sincerity, submission, and accountability—versus corrupting or peddling the gospel. The lesson closes with actionable takeaways for elders, teachers, and every believer about restoration, unity, and trusting God's sufficiency in ministry.   Duration 44:35

    "The Prison Epistles" by Chris Young Part 9

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 28, 2025 42:55 Transcription Available


    November 5, 2025 - Wednesday PM Bible Class   In this episode the teacher steps in to “pinch hit” for an eventful week in the nation's capital and leads a deep study through Philippians, focusing on chapter 3 while setting the stage with material from chapters 1–2. After a brief devotional by Cody, the speaker traces the epistle's structure—greeting and epistolary prayer—and highlights Paul's aim to equip the Philippians to live differently from the surrounding culture. The conversation examines Paul's pattern of alternating positive examples and admonitions: Paul himself (in prison for preaching the gospel), the humility of Christ, and faithful coworkers Timothy and Epaphroditus. These models illustrate the central ethic of putting others before self, pursuing unity, and finding joy even amid suffering. Practical imperatives—stand firm, do nothing from selfish ambition, and work out your salvation with fear and trembling—are explained in context. Episode highlights include Paul's warning about external threats to the church: the “dogs,” the “evil workers,” and the “false circumcision” (Judaizers). The host unpacks Paul's contrast between reliance on fleshly credentials and the surpassing value of knowing Christ, reviewing Paul's pre‑Christian pedigree to show why abandoning those gains for Christ is the true path to joy. The study moves to core takeaways in Philippians 3: joy comes by avoiding wrong influences, putting Christ above fleshly accomplishments, truly knowing Christ (including the power of his resurrection and the fellowship of suffering), forgetting the past, and pressing toward the upward call. The episode closes with Paul's call to follow his example, watch for those who are enemies of the cross, and live as citizens of heaven awaiting transformation. Listeners can expect theological exposition, practical application for congregational unity, personal challenges about priorities and spiritual formation, and memorable examples from Scripture showing how joy is produced when Christ is prized above all else.   Duration 45:13

    "Four Faces of Providence in Ruth: Lingering (Waiting) (Chapter Three)" by Neal Pollard

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 22, 2025 32:18


    December 21, 2025 - Sunday PM Sermon   Four Faces of Providence in Ruth: Lingering (Waiting) (Chapter Three)   Neal Pollard  I. BE IN THE ________________ ___________________ (2)  II. BE YOUR ______________________ (3)  III. DO THE __________________ _____________________ (4)  IV. HAVE ____________________ _____________________ (6)  V. DO NOT ___________________ (11)   Duration 32:19

    "Raised with Christ: Living the Resurrection Life (Colossians 3)" by Hiram Kemp

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 21, 2025 30:07


    Dec 21, 2025 - Sunday AM Sermon   Raised with Christ: Living the Resurrection Life (Colossians 3)  Hiram Kemp    1. Put ________________ Ways to ________________ (Colossians 3:1-9)  2. _____________ on _____________ New ______________ (Colossians 3:10-14)  3. Let _______________ Dominate Your ________________ (Colossians 3:15)  4. ______________ Out Your _______________ in ___________ (Colossians 3:16-17)  5. Practice _________________ in Every ___________________ (Colossians 3:18-25)   Duration 30:08

    "A Study of 2 Corinthians" by Neal Pollard - Part 2

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 21, 2025 39:50 Transcription Available


    December 14, 2025 - Sunday AM Bible Class   In this episode we continue our study of 2 Corinthians, focusing on chapters 1:12 through 2:17. The speaker reviews the major themes introduced earlier — suffering, comfort, confidence, and leadership — and draws two central principles: leadership inevitably involves suffering, and faithful leadership draws us closer to God. Using Paul as the model, the lesson examines how leaders become visible and vulnerable, how criticism and misunderstanding (especially from the Corinthians) test a leader's motives, and why leaders must be trusted when acting according to biblical qualifications and God's will. The episode traces Paul's travel plans and explains why he delayed visiting Corinth: not out of selfish motives or wishy-washiness, but because of concern for the congregation—particularly following the difficult disciplinary issue addressed in 1 Corinthians 5—and because Paul was responding to God's leading amid threats of imprisonment on his journey to Jerusalem. The speaker interprets key verses (including Paul's defense of his conscience and character, the ‘‘yes and no'' charge, and the assurance of God's faithfulness and the Spirit as a seal) while emphasizing that God's promises and presence are the true reward for leaders, not fame or wealth. Listeners will hear practical applications for modern church leadership—how criticism often stems from incomplete facts, the difference between constructive and destructive criticism, the pressures of living in a "glass house," and the importance of trusting biblically qualified leaders. The talk also highlights motivations for faithful leadership: the grace of God, the judgment seat of Christ, the promises and work of God, the glory of God, and the relationships with God's people. The episode concludes with encouragement that even amid misunderstanding and suffering, God comforts and establishes leaders who serve faithfully.   Duration 42:39

    "The Prison Epistles" by Chris Young Part 8

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 21, 2025 39:25 Transcription Available


    October 29, 2025 - Wednesday PM Bible Class   Good evening. In this episode we finish Philippians chapter 1 and move into chapter 2 as part of a quarter-long study of Paul's prison epistles. Recorded as a teaching session, the episode places Paul in Rome under house arrest and highlights the recurring theme of joy throughout Philippians — not as a response to circumstances but as rooted in Christ and his gospel.   The study reviews chapter 1: the joy of prayerful fellowship, purposeful living, and the tension in Paul's heart about living or dying — recognizing that being with Christ would be far better, yet there remains work to do for the church. From verse 27 onward the focus shifts to the “joy of sacrificing self”: the call to let one's conduct be worthy of the gospel, to stand fast in the Spirit, and to strive together in unity despite persecution. Key cross-references (Acts 5 and 1 Peter 4) are used to show how suffering for Christ is portrayed as an honor or gift that leads to deeper joy.   Chapter 2 is emphasized as a direct continuation (note the connective therefore) and underscores unity through humility. Verses 3–4 give the practical formula for unity — do nothing from selfish ambition, esteem others better than yourself, and look out for others' interests. Verses 5–11 present the supreme example: Christ's self-emptying humility, incarnation, obedience to death on a cross, and God's subsequent exaltation of Jesus so that every knee will bow. John 1 and Isaiah/Romans references are used to clarify Christ's deity and lordship.   Practical teachings covered include working out your salvation with fear and trembling while recognizing God works in us, doing all things without complaining or disputing so the church may shine as lights in a crooked generation, and holding fast to the word of life. The episode closes with the joy of working together: Paul's praise for Timothy's proven servant-heart and the story of Epaphroditus, who risked his health for the mission and is to be received with gladness.   Listeners can expect a sermon-style exposition that blends biblical exegesis, pastoral application, and historical context, with repeated calls to unity, humility, perseverance in suffering, and Christ-centered joy.   Duration 42:47

    "Four Faces of Providence in Ruth: Labor (Chapter Two)" by Neal Pollard

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 15, 2025 34:56


    December 14, 2025 - Sunday PM Sermon   Four Faces of Providence in Ruth: "Labor" (Chapter 2)    Neal Pollard    1.  GOD WORKED THROUGH RUTH'S _______________ TO _______________ (1-2)     2.  GOD WORKED THROUGH RUTH'S _____________________ TO WORK (3-9)     3.  GOD WORKED THROUGH RUTH'S ____________ AND ______________ (10-13)     4.  GOD WORKED THROUGH RUTH'S ______________________ (14-23)   Duration 34:56

    "Jesus: A Life Like No Other" by Hiram Kemp

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 14, 2025 34:20


    December 14, 2025 - Sunday AM Sermon   Jesus: A Life Like No Other  Hiram Kemp     1. A ________________________ Birth (Mathew 1:18-25; Luke 1:26-35)  2. Perfect _______________________ (John 8:29)  3.  ____________________ Teaching (Matthew 7:28-29; John 7:46)  4. Ministry of _________________ & _______________ (Mark 1:40-45; Luke 7:22)  5.  _______________________ Death (Mark 10:45; John 19:30)  6. _______________________ Resurrection (Matthew 28:5-6)  7.  ________________________ Reign (Acts 2:32-36)   Duration 34:21

    "Four Faces of Providence in Ruth: Loss (Chapter One)" by Neal Pollard

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 8, 2025 33:25


    December 7, 2025 - Sunday PM Sermon   FOUR FACES OF PROVIDENCE IN RUTH: "LOSS" (Chapter One) — Neal Pollard    Providence is God's continual __________________ over His created ___________________    I. WE WILL FACE ___________ KINDS OF ________ (1:1-5)       A. ____________________ Loss (1)       B. ____________________ Loss (1)       C. ____________________ Loss (5)    II. WE WILL FACE ______________________ IN TIMES OF ___________________ (1:6-15)    III. THE DECISIONS WE MAKE IMPACT OUR ____________________ FROM LOSS (1:16-22)   Duration

    "The Savior God Promised" by Hiram Kemp

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 7, 2025 34:12


    December 7, 2025 - Sunday AM Sermon    The Savior God Promised — Hiram Kemp  1. ______________________ the _______________________ (Genesis 3:15)    2. ___________________ all __________________ (Genesis 12:1-3; Isaiah 2:2-3)    3. _____________ the ________________ & confront _________________ (Isaiah 42:1-4)    4. ________________ __________________ to those in ________________ (Isaiah 9:1-2, 42:6-7)    5. _________________ Through ___________________ (Isaiah 53)    6. ____________ a New____________ & a New ______________ (Jeremiah 31:31-34; Ezek. 36:25-27)   Duration 34:13

    "A Study of 2 Corinthians" by Neal Pollard - Part 1

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 7, 2025 42:01 Transcription Available


    December 7, 2025 - Sunday AM Bible Class   In this episode Neal announces a new quarter-long study of 2 Corinthians and explains why the class begins with Paul's second letter to the Corinthians rather than First Corinthians. He places the letter in historical context (Acts 18–20), ties it to the later prison epistles (Ephesians, Philippians, Colossians, Philemon), and recommends earlier teaching on First Corinthians by Hiram and Brittany as helpful background. The episode gives an extended cultural and historical overview of Corinth — its Greek origins, destruction and re-founding under Rome, strategic isthmus location with two ports, the prominence of the slave trade, widespread pagan immorality (including how “to Corinthianize” became synonymous with sexual vice), and the city's importance as the provincial capital of Achaia. These details set the stage for why the Corinthian church faced the problems Paul addresses. Key topics covered include a review of the problems raised in 1 Corinthians (division, idolatry, sexual immorality, marriage questions, worship abuses such as corruption of the Lord's Supper, confusion over spiritual gifts, questions about the resurrection, and factional allegiance to leaders), and how the church largely responded to Paul's first letter. The speaker explains that 2 Corinthians arises from a new crisis: a group of Jewish opponents who undermine Paul's apostleship and claim apostolic authority themselves. The episode highlights the central themes and purposes of 2 Corinthians: Paul's defense of his apostleship and leadership, the danger of false or unordained leaders, and the pastoral necessity of protecting church order. It emphasizes Paul's personal investment in the Corinthian congregation — the suffering he endured, his pastoral care, and his insistence that God-ordained leadership matters because “sheep need a shepherd.” A major motif introduced is comfort: the speaker surveys 2 Corinthians 1:1–11 and summarizes the letter's repeated emphasis on comfort in the midst of affliction. He identifies the sources of that comfort as God (the “Father of mercies”), Christ, other believers who have suffered, and the prayers of the community, and underscores Paul's theme of abundant, effective consolation despite severe trials. Guests and contributors mentioned include teachers Hiram and Brittany (previous lectures on First Corinthians) and Chris (his Wednesday class on the prison epistles); the speaker also references Luke's account in Acts and several Pauline passages as he reads and opens 2 Corinthians 1:1–11. Listeners can expect a mix of historical background, theological orientation to the letter, pastoral application about church leadership and suffering, and a reading of the opening verses to begin the study.   Duration 44:47

    "The Prison Epistles" by Chris Young Part 7

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 7, 2025 37:32 Transcription Available


    October 22, 2025 - Wednesday PM Bible Class In this episode we begin a verse-by-verse study of the book of Philippians, focusing on chapter 1 and its historical context. Chris sets the scene by reviewing Acts 16 — the Macedonian call that brought Paul, Silas, Timothy, and Luke to Philippi — and highlights key persons like Lydia and the Philippian jailer who played roles in the church's founding. The episode also situates Paul's letter historically, explaining his Roman imprisonment (house arrest around AD 60–62) and how that confinement shaped the letter's emphasis. Topics covered include: the geographic and cultural background of Philippi (a Roman colony in Macedonia), the origin of the church there, and the circumstances that prompted Paul's affectionate and joyful letter. The host unpacks major themes such as joy and rejoicing, the meaning of being a bondservant of Christ, the distinction between the believers Paul calls “saints” and his own humility, and the practical results of gospel partnership between Paul and the Philippian congregation (including their generosity). Key points emphasized: Paul's overriding theme that true Christian joy is rooted in Christ and the gospel — not in changing circumstances; the joy of prayerful fellowship (Paul's thankful, persistent prayers for the Philippians); the joy of purposeful living (how Paul's chains actually advanced the gospel and emboldened other believers); and the famous tension in Paul between “to live is Christ” and “to die is gain,” showing his devotion to Christ and concern for the church's growth. The episode highlights concrete illustrations from the text: the Macedonian call, Lydia's conversion and hospitality, Paul's witness to Caesar's household and the palace guard, divisions among those preaching (envy vs. goodwill), and practical exhortations for love, knowledge, discernment, and bearing the fruits of righteousness. Listeners can expect historical background, theological teaching, and pastoral application designed to help them understand Philippians' message of Christ-centered joy and faithful living.   Duration 40:00

    "Listening & Living Out the Word" by Hiram Kemp and Neal Pollard

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 30, 2025 39:40


    November 30, 2025 - Sunday AM Sermon   Listening & Living Out the Word (James 1:17-27)  Receiving the Word Properly (James 1:17-21)  Hiram Kemp    I. _______________ the _____________ (James 1:17-18)    II. _____________ the _____________ (James 1:19-20)    III. ___________ Your ____________ Accordingly (James 1:21)    Responding Faithfully (James 1:22-27)  Neal Pollard    I.  SOME RESPOND WORTHLESSLY      A. They _______________ Themselves (22)      B. They ______________ the _____________ (23)      C. They Don't _______________ The _________________ (26)    II.    SOME RESPOND WORTHILY     A. They Do What The ____________ Says Do (22)      B. They _________________ In The _______________ (25)     C. They _________________ the _______________ (27)     D. They ____________ _____________ From The _______________ (27)   Duration 39:40

    "The Gospel of John" by Barrett Hammer - Part 13

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 30, 2025 35:51 Transcription Available


    November 30, 2025 - Sunday AM Bible Class   This episode is the final class of the quarter and a wrap-up of a multi-week study of the Gospel of John, focusing on the remaining "I AM" statements. The instructor leads the group through extended readings and discussion from John 10, 11, 14, and 15, explores Old Testament echoes (Psalm 23, Ezekiel 34, Jeremiah 23, Isaiah, Micah, Exodus), and highlights John's stated purpose in John 20:30–31: that readers may believe Jesus is the Christ and have life in his name. Topics covered include: "I am the Good Shepherd" (John 10) — Jesus' sacrificial care, contrast with hirelings, intimate knowledge of his sheep, protection and provision; "I am the Resurrection and the Life" (John 11) — power over death, hope beyond the grave, and comfort in loss; "I am the Way, the Truth, and the Life" (John 14) — Jesus as exclusive access to the Father, truth as the foundation for the path, and life as the goal; and "I am the True Vine" (John 15) — abiding in Christ, pruning, bearing fruit, and dependence on the vine for spiritual vitality. The class includes interactive dialogue with students, practical applications, and short teaching moments: why Jesus uses Old Testament imagery, how knowing the flock shapes ministry and relationships, the need to follow and bring others into the fold, and how trust in the resurrection eases anxiety about death and loss. Key takeaways: Jesus' "I AM" sayings repeatedly point to his deity and his unique role as shepherd, savior, guide, and life-giver; faith here is presented as trust grounded in signs and witness rather than blind belief; abiding in Christ is essential for fruitfulness and growth; Christian discipleship requires intentional relationship-building (knowing the flock) and witness to others. The instructor also reflects on John's deliberate repetition and selection of signs as a method for deepening faith and encouraging lifelong study. This is a classroom conversation rich with questions, anecdotes (including a youth's perceptive remark and a brief sports anecdote about repetition), and pastoral application intended to help listeners expect thoughtful exposition, biblical connections, and practical steps for following Jesus as the Good Shepherd, the Resurrection, the Way, the Truth, and the Life.   Duration 41:52

    "The Prison Epistles" by Chris Young Part 6

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 30, 2025 37:40 Transcription Available


    October 15, 2025 - Wednesday PM Bible Class   In this episode the speaker completes a close study of Ephesians 5 and begins unpacking Ephesians 6, summarizing the major themes of the letter — life "in Christ," the centrality of the church, God's eternal plan, unity, and peace — and showing how the first three doctrinal chapters lead to the practical applications of the last three. Topics covered include the Biblical model for marriage (wives' submission and husbands' sacrificial love modeled on Christ and the church), the church-Christ analogy, and how authentic leadership in the home eliminates abuse and fosters mutual respect. The discussion also examines children and parenting (honor, obedience, and discipline tempered by love) and the cultural background of first-century Ephesus to clarify passages addressing slaves and masters, with modern application to employer–employee relationships rather than an endorsement of slavery. The episode shifts to spiritual preparedness with an extended look at Ephesians 6: the call to "put on the whole armor of God" (truth, righteousness, readiness with the gospel of peace, faith, salvation, and the Word), the reality of spiritual warfare, and the need for persistent prayer and mutual intercession. Paul's perspective as an "ambassador in chains" is highlighted — he asks for boldness to proclaim the mystery of the gospel rather than release from prison — and the host urges listeners to pray for missionaries and those suffering, referencing a recent urgent prayer request related to students in Tanzania. Key takeaways: understand submission in its biblical and cultural context and under God's higher authority; husbands are called to sacrificial, nourishing love; parents must balance discipline and tenderness; the slave–master instructions point to ethical employer–employee conduct today; believers must equip themselves with all aspects of God's armor and commit to prayer and bold witness even amid hardship.   Duration 41:58

    "The Great Example of Onesiphorus" by Neal Pollard

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 24, 2025 30:15


    November 23, 2025 - Sunday PM Sermon   The Great Example of Onesiphorus (2 Tim. 1:15-18)   Neal Pollard  I. HE WAS AN EXAMPLE OF _______________    II. HE WAS AN EXAMPLE OF ______________    III. HE WAS AN EXAMPLE OF ______________    IV. HE WAS AN EXAMPLE OF ______________    V. HE WAS AN EXAMPLE OF _______________    Duration 30:16

    "360 Degree Gratitude: Forward Gratitude in Advance" by Hiram Kemp

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 23, 2025 32:59


    November 23, 2025 - Sunday AM Sermon   360 Degree Gratitude: Forward Gratitude in Advance (Habakkuk 3:17-19)  Hiram Kemp    1. ________________ God's ___________________ (Habakkuk 3:17-18)    2. ______________ Despite ________________ Circumstances (Habakkuk 3:18)    3. _______________ on God's ______________ (Habakkuk 3:19)    4. ______________ in _______________ Action (Habakkuk 3:19)    5. ______________ in God's _______________ __________________ (Habakkuk 3:19)    Duration 33:00

    "The Gospel of John" by Jeremy Waddell - Part 12

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 23, 2025 36:43 Transcription Available


    November 23, 2025 - Sunday AM Bible Class   In this episode the teacher delivers what he calls his final class in the book of John and clarifies last week's discussion on worship and encouragement. The session reviews why worship must be centered on God and how Christians should build one another up: encouraging performers young and old, supporting preachers and leaders, and showing grace in our speech. Practical pastoral counsel stresses the need to be present at worship even when we feel unprepared, drawing on Hebrews 4:15–16 and other scriptures to reassure listeners that coming to the assembly provides mercy and help in time of need. The main biblical focus is on Jesus as the true temple. Using John and Old Testament references the speaker traces the theme of God dwelling with his people — from the tabernacle to Jesus (John 1:14) — and explains how Jesus is the connection between heaven and earth (John 1:51, Jacob's ladder imagery). Jesus' cleansing of the temple (John 2:13–17) is presented both as a display of his authority and as a call to purity: God's house should be a house of prayer, not a den of profiteering. The talk also examines Jesus' provocative claim about destroying the temple and raising it in three days, showing how that points to his death and resurrection and the replacement of the old temple system. Key scriptural moments covered include Jesus teaching openly in the temple (John 7), the leaders' fear that Rome would remove their place (John 11), and how repeated New Testament passages emphasize access to the Father through Christ (John 14:6; Hebrews 10; 1 Timothy 2:5). The speaker ties these passages to practical lessons: do not cling to earthly buildings or possessions as security, stay rooted in scripture, look back on life experiences to understand Jesus' words, and build your life on Christ rather than on shifting earthly foundations. Pastoral application throughout the lesson includes encouraging one another daily (Philippians 2; Ephesians 4; 1 Thessalonians 5:11), pursuing holiness and inward purity (James, Psalms, Proverbs), and rejoicing in the spiritual fruits and joy that come from abiding in Christ (John 6–8; Galatians 5:22). The episode closes with a reminder that Jesus is the final sacrifice and mediator who grants forgiveness and access to God, and the speaker urges listeners to know, obey, and abide in Christ as the true temple. Barrett is mentioned as taking the next class to summarize previous lessons; class participants contribute reflections during the discussion.   Duration 39:48

    "The Prison Epistles" by Chris Young Part 5

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 23, 2025 34:27 Transcription Available


    October 8, 2025 - Wednesday PM Bible Class   In this episode the speaker continues a verse-by-verse study of the prison epistles with a focused look at Ephesians chapter 5. After a brief review of the book's structure—chapters 1–3 as doctrinal teaching and chapters 4–6 as practical application—the sermon centers on Paul's charge to "walk worthy of the calling." The teaching places Ephesians 5 in its historical context (Paul in Roman custody, c. 60–62 AD) and highlights major themes such as unity, being "in Christ," and the spiritual blessings of the church. The bulk of the episode unpacks three interlocking ways Christians are to live: walking in love (vv. 1–7), walking in the light (vv. 8–14), and walking in wisdom (vv. 15–21). Walking in love emphasizes imitating Christ's sacrificial love and avoiding behaviors unbefitting the saints—sexual immorality, impurity, greed, crude speech—and warns against deceptive teachings that excuse sinful living. The walking-in-light section contrasts darkness and light, explains the fruit of the light (goodness, righteousness, truth), and urges believers to expose evil rather than join it, with cross-references to John and other New Testament passages. When addressing wisdom, the speaker exhorts listeners to "walk circumspectly," redeem the time because the days are evil, and understand the will of the Lord through Scripture. He contrasts drunkenness with being filled with the Spirit and outlines practical means of Spirit-filled life: speaking to one another in psalms, hymns, and spiritual songs; singing and giving thanks; and submitting to one another in the fear of God. Relevant passages from Matthew, Proverbs, and Romans are used to illustrate wisdom versus foolishness and the attitude of mutual honor among believers. The episode closes by previewing the remainder of Ephesians: upcoming discussion of marital responsibilities (wives and husbands), household relationships (parents and children, masters and slaves as employer/employee analogies), and the spiritual warfare material in chapter 6 about putting on the armor of God. No outside guests are featured; this is a pastoral teaching aimed at giving listeners clear doctrinal grounding and practical, everyday application for church life, family relationships, speech, and Christian conduct.   Duration 37:40

    "Why Only Jesus' Church Will Be Saved (Hebrews 12:22-29) " by Hiram Kemp

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 17, 2025 25:10


    November 16, 2025 - Sunday PM Sermon   Why Only Jesus' Church Will Be Saved (Hebrews 12:22-29) Hiram Kemp 1. _______________ Claimed as _______________ Citizens (Hebrews 12:22) 2. ________________ & _______________ by God (Hebrews 12:23) 3. _______________ Yet ________________ Savior (Hebrews 12:24) 4. _______________ & ______________ Living (Hebrews 12:25-29   Duration 25:11

    "360 Degree Gratitude: Outward (Luke 17:11-19) - How Gratitude Makes You Whole" by Hiram Kemp

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 16, 2025 34:25


    November 16, 2025 - Sunday AM Sermon   360 Degree Gratitude: Outward (Luke 17:11-19) - How Gratitude Makes You Whole Hiram Kemp 1. ___________________ Reminds Us of Our _______________ (Luke 17:11-14) 2. __________________ Turns Us Back to __________________ (Luke 17:15) 3. _______________ Makes Us ______________ Out (Luke 17:16-18) 4. __________________ Expresses Itself in __________________ (Luke 17:16) 5. _________________ Brings Your Life ________________ Circle (Luke 17:18-19)   Duration 34:26

    "The Gospel of John" by Jeremy Waddell - Part 11

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 16, 2025 36:50 Transcription Available


    November 16, 2025 - Sunday AM Bible Class   In this episode a church class dives into John 4:21–24 to unpack what it means to "worship the Father in spirit and in truth." The host leads a practical, Scripture-based conversation that revisits Jesus' exchange with the Samaritan woman and challenges listeners to evaluate the sincerity, direction, and authority of their worship. Key biblical passages referenced include John 4, Matthew 15, Acts 17, Colossians 2:23, Psalm 122:1, Proverbs 14:12, and Isaiah 42:8. The episode features contributions and anecdotes from congregation members—Barrett (on the "I AM" statements), Clint Harbison (on singing to God, not the crowd), Phil and others—making the discussion interactive and grounded in real worship experiences. Questions from attendees shape the conversation about practical church life and personal devotion. Major themes include distinguishing true worship from three kinds of false worship (vain/empty worship, ignorant worship, and will-worship/self-made religion), the scriptural requirement that worship be directed toward God alone, and why God does not have to accept worship offered outside His revealed will. The message emphasizes that worship is not a matter of personal preference but of obedience to God's Word. The host and guests also address concrete, everyday issues: the importance of preparing your heart before coming to assembly, maintaining the right attitude and spirit during singing, prayer, and the Lord's Supper, avoiding distractions that hinder others, and resisting the urge to use worship to impress people or elevate leaders. Practical tips include being mentally prepared, focusing on the meaning of the Lord's Supper, and balancing encouragement with humility. The episode stresses a cultural shift from consumer-minded attendance to a giver's posture—asking "What can I do for God?" rather than "What will I get?" Listeners are encouraged to point praise to God when affirming others, so encouragement builds faith rather than ego. In closing, the class reminds listeners that worship is the most important activity of the week and a rehearsal for eternity: learn to worship rightly now so you can join in heaven's unending praise. Expect candid reflection, scripture teaching, practical application, and timely encouragement to prepare your heart and actions for authentic worship.   Duration 40:53

    "The Prison Epistles" by Chris Young Part 4

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 16, 2025 37:31 Transcription Available


    October 1, 2025 - Wednesday PM Bible Class   In this episode the speaker walks through Ephesians chapter 4, transitioning from the doctrinal foundation of the first three chapters to the practical, everyday implications for Christian living. The talk highlights major themes including the spiritual blessings we have in Christ, reconciliation between Jews and Gentiles, and the central call to unity in the church. Audience interaction (including remarks from Gary, Neil, Bob and others) helps illustrate the points and keeps the session conversational. Key doctrinal reminders include the seven "ones" (one Spirit, one Lord, one faith, one baptism, and one God) and the idea that Christ has ascended and given gifts to the church. The lecture examines the roles named in the text — apostles, prophets, evangelists, pastors/shepherds and teachers — and explains their purpose in equipping the saints for ministry and building up the body until unity and maturity in Christ are reached. The speaker emphasizes the character qualities that promote unity: lowliness, gentleness, long-suffering, and above all humility. Practical application covers putting off the "old man" and putting on the "new man" through the renewing of the mind, resisting false teaching, and pursuing spiritual growth (moving from milk to meat). Concrete behavioral instructions are discussed at length: speak truthfully, manage anger ("be angry and do not sin" — deal with conflict quickly and avoid giving the devil a foothold), stop stealing and work to give to those in need, and avoid corrupt talk. Instead, believers are urged to be kind, tenderhearted and forgiving, following Christ's example and remembering that they are sealed by the Holy Spirit. Other themes include church growth as a result of every member contributing their gifts, the importance of mentorship and teaching, and biblical counsel on discernment and maturity (references to Hebrews and Romans are used to underscore growth expectations). The episode closes with a challenge to live out the contrasts of Ephesians — old vs. new, death vs. life — and practical encouragement to pursue unity, holiness and loving service within the church.   Duration 40:31

    "How Not to Raise Worthless Kids" by Neal Pollard

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 10, 2025 28:41


    November 9, 2025 - Sunday PM Sermon   How Not to Raise Worthless Kids (1 Sam. 2-3)  Neal Pollard  Eli Raised Worthless Children...  I. THROUGH ______________ PARENTING (2:29)  II. THROUGH ____________ REBELLION (2:29)  III. THROUGH HIS ______ __________ (2:29)  IV. THROUGH HIS __________ TO __________ HIS CHILDREN (3:13)  Contrast His Parenting with That Of ___________ (ch. 1-2)    Duration 28:42

    "360 Degree Gratitude: INWARD" by Neal Pollard

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 9, 2025 29:05


    November 9, 2025 - Sunday AM Sermon 360 Degree Gratitude: INWARD (Philippians 4:4-7) Neal Pollard  This Text Shows Us How To...  I. _________ OUR HEARTS FOR ____________ (4-5)     A. ___________ (4)     B. Be ________ (5)     C. ________ The Coming Of ________ (5)  II. _________ OUR HEARTS FROM _______________ (6)     A. Don't __________ (6)     B. __________ (6)  III. _________ OUR HEARTS THROUGH ___________ (7)  Conclusion   A. Paul Is Calling for A ______ Heart in This Text!    Duration 29:06

    "The Gospel of John" by Barrett Hammer - Part 10

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 9, 2025 34:27 Transcription Available


    November 9, 2025 - Sunday AM Bible Class   In this episode Barrett continues a study of the Gospel of John, focusing on the distinctive "I AM" statements of Jesus. Building on last week's lesson, the discussion places John's words in first-century Judea—under Roman occupation and steeped in Old Testament expectation—and explains why Jesus' metaphors were both surprising and provocative to his contemporaries. The episode covers the historical and theological context of John (likely written around A.D. 90 for a mixed Jewish and Gentile audience) and explains how each "I AM" statement draws on everyday imagery and Old Testament echoes (Exodus, Isaiah, Psalms, Deuteronomy) to reveal Jesus' identity and mission. The host reads and unpacks three of the seven statements in detail: "I am the bread of life" (John 6), "I am the light of the world" (John 8), and "I am the door/gate" (John 10), showing how each image communicates spiritual sustenance, guidance, protection, and exclusive access to the Father. Contributors in the conversation include Jeremy, Neal, Hiram, Roger, Russell, Rhonda and other class participants, who bring questions, Old Testament connections, and real-life applications. The episode also reflects on practical themes—why people struggled to accept Jesus then and now, barriers like pride, tradition, and fear of social consequences, and how modern pressures and instant gratification can distract from spiritual hunger. A memorable comparison to the Challenger disaster illustrates how ignoring warnings and truth can have tragic consequences. Listeners can expect close readings of John 6, 8, and 10, clear explanations of key Old Testament ties, examples of how to live out these metaphors today (prayer, community, Bible study, being a light to others), and an invitation to examine whether they truly know Jesus or merely know about him. The host closes by previewing a continuation of the series that will cover the remaining "I AM" statements in a future session.   Duration 39:59

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