The Paradox Church is located in Downtown Fort Worth, Texas. Our work is to Preach the Gospel, Plant Churches, and Push Back Darkness.

Ministry is harder than it looks. Marriages fall apart. Leaders walk away. Good people quit. So how do you make it to the end?In this message from 1 Timothy 4, Pastor Jim walks through five things the Apostle Paul gives to a young pastor named Timothy to help him finish well — and they apply to every Christian, not just pastors.The big idea: train hard for godliness. Not to earn God's love. From it.In this message: • Why godliness requires intentional training (not just good intentions) • How to live intergenerationally and why it matters • What it means to immerse yourself in Scripture for the long game • How to discover and operate in your spiritual gifts • Why your perseverance isn't just about youIf you've ever felt like quitting — your faith, your marriage, your ministry — this one's for you.

How do you spot false teaching when it doesn't look false? When it sounds holy, feels loving, and maybe even sounds better than real Christianity?In this sermon, Pastor Jim walks us through 1 Timothy 3:14–4:5 and gives us the tools to answer that question. The church has been entrusted with something sacred — the gospel of Jesus Christ — and Paul calls her the pillar and buttress of truth. That means what we believe and how we live it out both matter. A healthy church needs both hands.From theological triage to the sons of Sceva, from seared consciences to the prosperity gospel, Pastor Jim traces the anatomy of false teaching and lands on one defining mark: false teaching always leaves Jesus behind. It doesn't deny Jesus outright — it just slowly moves past him. And the most dangerous version doesn't feel dangerous at all. It feels like peace.The antidote isn't more theological expertise. It's staying centered on Jesus. Staying close to him. Staying here with him.If you've ever wondered how to discern what's true from what just sounds true, this one is for you.

We live in a world obsessed with influence. We follow the most confident, the most impressive, the most followed — but audience doesn't equal authority, and charisma doesn't equal character.In this sermon, Pastor Stan walks us through 1 Timothy 3:1-13 and unpacks what God actually looks for in the leaders of his church. Spoiler: it's not charisma, platform, or the ability to draw a crowd. It's character in the hidden places. It's the inner life. It's the fear of the Lord.Whether you're in church leadership, aspiring to it, or simply following Jesus in the everyday, what Paul lays out here isn't just a job description for elders and deacons. It's a portrait of what Christ-likeness looks like for every believer.

Join us as we continue our series in the book of 1 Timothy, this week Pastor Nathan dives into God's word through 1 Timothy chapter 2.

In the second week of our series through 1 Timothy, Pastor Jim reminded us of the dangers of false teachers. Through 1 Timothy 1, we are reminded that healthy doctrine produces healthy disciples, and that what we believe ultimately shapes what we become.

In week six of A World Made New, Pastor Jim invites us to reimagine our joys and pleasures. In a world shaped by distraction and endless craving, we've lost our capacity for true delight. But in Christ, our desires are being restored, drawing us into a deeper satisfaction rooted in God's presence and the promise of a coming feast.

In week five of A World Made New, Pastor Jim invites us to reimagine our work. In Christ, what has been marked by striving, exhaustion, and self-definition will be restored. No longer driven by the need to prove our worth, our work will flow from it, becoming worship once again.

In week four of A World Made New, Pastor Jim invites us to imagine reconciled relationships. In Christ, what is fractured and strained will be made whole. We will be brought into perfect unity with God and one another, free from fear, insecurity, and division.

In week three of A World Made New, Pastor Jim leads us through 1 Corinthians 15 and the promise of a resurrected body. In Christ, our broken and weary bodies will be made new, raised in power, and freed from weakness and shame.

In week two of A World Made New, Pastor Jim leads us into the renewal of all creation. Romans 8 shows that creation itself is groaning, longing, and waiting to be made new. The brokenness we feel is not the end of the story, but the beginning of renewal.

In the first week of A World Made New, Pastor Jim invited us to reimagine our hope, not as escaping this world, but as God renewing it. Through Revelation 21, we saw that heaven is not where we go, but what comes down, where all things are made new and God dwells with His people.

In the final week of our series through the book of Job, Pastor James reflects on Job 42, highlighting Job's steadfastness in suffering and the compassion and mercy of God. Even in seasons of hardship, God meets His people with mercy, vindicating those who remain faithful and drawing them deeper into relationship with Him.

In week seven of our series through the book of Job, Pastor Jim reminds us that God does not waste our suffering. Even in pain, He refines our faith and uses it to draw us closer to Himself, our true and lasting treasure.

In week six of our series through the book of Job, Pastor Jim explores chapter 28 and the limits of human answers to suffering. As Job's friends cling to simplistic systems, we're reminded that wisdom cannot be mined, bought, or mastered. Instead, true understanding begins with awe-filled trust in God. In a world searching for explanations, we are invited to anchor our hope in this truth: our Redeemer lives.

This week, Pastor Nathan Johnson led us into the Great Commission, reminding us that we are called not to be impressive or successful, but faithful—secure in God's sovereignty and confident in His promised presence.

In week five of our series on the book of Job, Pastor Jim examines the tension we feel when bad things happen to good people, challenging the formulas we often use to make sense of suffering. Through Job's honest wrestling, we are reminded that God cannot be reduced to simple explanations and that real faith brings even our hardest questions before Him.

In the fourth week of our sermon series on the book of Job, Pastor Jim leads us into the sacred work of lament. Through Job's unfiltered grief, we see that faith does not require us to suppress our sorrow but invites us to bring it honestly before God.

A discussion on key themes found throughout the book of Job through the first few weeks of the series.

In the second week of our sermon series on the book of Job, Pastor Jim walked us through the moment Job loses everything he once held as evidence of God's goodness. Instead of turning away, Job falls into honest, desperate worship.