The latest feed from Poyntzpass Baptist Church on SermonAudio.com.

Join us each Sunday morning at 11am and Sunday evening at 6pm (GMT).

Join us each Sunday morning at 11am and Sunday evening at 6pm (GMT).

Join us each Sunday morning at 11am and Sunday evening at 6pm (GMT).

Join us each Sunday morning at 11am and Sunday evening at 6pm (GMT).

The passage calls believers to press on from foundational spiritual truths—repentance, faith, ritual washings, laying on of hands, resurrection, and judgment—toward mature Christian growth, not as a rejection of these principles but as a progression beyond them. Written to Jewish Christians, the text underscores that these foundational elements were already part of the Old Testament framework, preparing God's people for the Messiah's arrival.

Join us each Sunday morning at 11am and Sunday evening at 6pm (GMT).

Join us each Sunday morning at 11am and Sunday evening at 6pm (GMT).

The sermon centres on spiritual maturity as measured by one's ability to engage with the deeper truths of Scripture, contrasting spiritual infancy - marked by a reliance on basic teachings and devotional routines—with the growth required to grasp complex doctrines such as Christ's heavenly priesthood. Drawing from Hebrews 5, it emphasises that true maturity is not defined by time in the faith but by active engagement with Scripture, disciplined study, and the development of spiritual discernment to distinguish good from evil.

Join us each Sunday morning at 11am and Sunday evening at 6pm (GMT).

The sermon centres on the unjust trial of Jesus before Caiaphas, highlighting the profound injustice, corruption, and predetermined condemnation that characterized His arrest and examination. It emphasizes how Jesus, though innocent, was subjected to a sham trial—held at night, conducted in secret, lacking proper charges, and relying on contradictory false witnesses—fulfilling Old Testament prophecies of the suffering Servant who remains silent before His accusers. Pastor david Moore underscores the irony and spiritual blindness of Caiaphas, who, in condemning Jesus as a blasphemer, unknowingly prophesied the very truth of Christ's sacrificial death for the nation. Ultimately, the sermon drives home the gospel's heart: Jesus endured what He did not deserve—mockery, false judgment, and death—so that humanity might receive what it does not deserve—forgiveness, grace, and eternal life—revealing the depth of divine love and substitutionary atonement.

This passage from Matthew 26 captures the arrest of Jesus in the Garden of Gethsemane, revealing three distinct motives behind human responses to Christ: Judas's betrayal driven by greed, Peter's violent defence fueled by pride, and the multitudes' violent pursuit motivated by fear of losing power. Jesus, fully aware of each heart's condition, responds with calm authority, exposing hypocrisy, correcting pride, and affirming the fulfillment of Scripture. He rebukes Peter's use of violence, affirming that His mission is not defended by force but by divine sovereignty, and declares that His arrest is part of God's predetermined plan. The disciples' abandonment underscores the depth of human frailty, yet Jesus' willingness to endure betrayal, desertion, and suffering reveals His profound love and substitutionary sacrifice. Ultimately, the passage confronts every listener with the reality that Christ knows the deepest motives of the heart, yet still offers salvation to all who come to Him in repentance and faith.

This sermon, drawn from 2 Samuel 13, confronts the devastating consequences of unchecked lust and moral compromise within a family, using Amnon's rape of his half-sister Tamar as a sobering case study. It exposes the destructive nature of infatuation masquerading as love, contrasting it with the biblical definition of love found in 1 Corinthians 13—characterized by selflessness, truth, and respect—highlighting how Amnon's actions were rooted in selfish desire, deceit, and coercion, not genuine affection. Our pastor underscores the moral and spiritual failure of King David, whose failure to discipline his son allowed sin to fester, ultimately leading to familial breakdown, exile, and death, illustrating how unrepented sin leads to long-term ruin. Through this narrative, the sermon calls both believers and unbelievers to repentance, warning that sin, if indulged, leads not to freedom but to bondage, shame, and eternal separation from God, while affirming that true love is found only in God's redemptive, sacrificial grace through Christ.

Join us each Sunday morning at 11am and Sunday evening at 6pm (GMT).

Join us each Sunday morning at 11am and Sunday evening at 6pm (GMT).

Join us each Sunday morning at 11am and Sunday evening at 6pm (GMT).

Join us each Sunday morning at 11am and Sunday evening at 6pm (GMT).

Join us each Sunday morning at 11am and Sunday evening at 6pm (GMT).

Join us each Sunday morning at 11am and Sunday evening at 6pm (GMT).

Join us each Sunday morning at 11am and Sunday evening at 6pm (GMT).

Join us each Sunday morning at 11am and Sunday evening at 6pm (GMT).

Join us each Sunday morning at 11am and Sunday evening at 6pm (GMT).

Join us each Sunday morning at 11am and Sunday evening at 6pm (GMT).

Join us each Sunday morning at 11am and Sunday evening at 6pm (GMT).

Join us each Sunday morning at 11am and Sunday evening at 6pm (GMT).

Join us each Sunday morning at 11am and Sunday evening at 6pm (GMT).

Join us each Sunday morning at 11am and Sunday evening at 6pm (GMT).

Join us each Sunday morning at 11am and Sunday evening at 6pm (GMT).

Join us each Sunday morning at 11am and Sunday evening at 6pm (GMT).

Join us each Sunday morning at 11am and Sunday evening at 6pm (GMT).

Join us each Sunday morning at 11am and Sunday evening at 6pm (GMT).

Join us each Sunday morning at 11am and Sunday evening at 6pm (GMT).

Join us each Sunday morning at 11am and Sunday evening at 6pm (GMT).

Join us each Sunday morning at 11am and Sunday evening at 6pm (BST).

Join us each Sunday morning at 11am and Sunday evening at 6pm (BST).

Join us each Sunday morning at 11am and Sunday evening at 6pm (BST).

Join us each Sunday morning at 11am and Sunday evening at 6pm (BST).

The study establishes Christ's supremacy over angels through a comprehensive exegesis of Hebrews 1:4–14, emphasises His divine nature, eternal existence, and unique role as both King and Priest. Drawing from multiple Old Testament passages—Psalm 2, 2 Samuel 7, Deuteronomy 32, Psalm 104, Psalm 45, Psalm 102, and especially Psalm 110—Pastor David Moore demonstrates that Jesus is uniquely the Son of God, eternally seated at the Father's right hand, and destined to rule over His enemies in a future millennial kingdom. The argument refutes views that diminish Christ's divinity or relegate Him to a created status, affirming His eternal throne, unchanging nature, and exclusive right to worship, making Jesus alone, the one name above every name, worthy of all honour, service, and adoration.

The sermon centres on the transformative power of faith in the Lord Jesus Christ, conveyed through Grant's personal journey from secular Jewish upbringing to Messianic belief, marked by dramatic conversions, divine encounters, and the restoration of family relationships through prayer and divine intervention. The tone is deeply pastoral and hopeful, inviting listeners to embrace faith not through ritual but through personal surrender, culminating in a communal blessing using the Aaronic Benediction and the shofar, symbolising divine protection and the outpouring of grace upon individuals and communities.

The sermon centers on the transformative power of sacrificial, faith-based giving, drawing from 2 Corinthians 8 to highlight the Macedonian churches' extraordinary generosity despite deep affliction and poverty. It emphasizes that true giving is not measured by financial abundance but by the heart's commitment.

Join us each Sunday morning at 11am and Sunday evening at 6pm (BST).