The Table exists to shift a generation from reaction to visionary through the person and work of Jesus. Tune in every week to hear the latest messages from our community. To find out more about who we are check out our website thetabletx.com Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/thetabletx/suppor…

In this sermon, Embrace the Unknowing, we explore the story of the man born blind in John 9 and the surprising contrast between those who claim certainty and the one who simply admits, “I don't know.” While the religious leaders cling to their ideas about God, the healed man rests in the humility of experience: I was blind, but now I see. Reflecting on the limits of intellect, the wisdom of the mystics, and the practice of silence, this message invites us to loosen our grip on certainty and rediscover faith as trust, openness, and wonder.

In “Humans & Transhumanists,” Brett reflects on the Genesis story of Adam, Eve, and the serpent to explore what it means to be creatures in a technological age increasingly obsessed with transcendence. Reading the garden narrative not as science but as spiritual insight into the human condition, he connects the serpent's promise — “You will not surely die… you will be like God” — to modern transhumanist visions of merging with machines and overcoming mortality. While affirming the genuine good technology can accomplish in reducing suffering, this sermon draws a thoughtful line between healing human limits and attempting to erase them altogether. Rather than grasping for control, mastery, and pseudo-immortality, Brett invites us to embrace our fragility, dependence, and embodied humanity as gifts — remembering that technology exists to serve creatures, not replace them.

In this sermon, “Are We Out of the Woods?”, Jesse reflects on the complicated baggage many of us carry into Lent — guilt, failed fasts, spiritual performance — and asks whether the wilderness is something to escape or something to learn from. Revisiting Jesus' forty days in the desert, and drawing insight from everything from survival shows to contemplative writers, he explores why fasting is so difficult in a culture built on comfort and distraction. Rather than using Lent to prove our holiness, this episode reframes it as an invitation to face our fragility, sit with discomfort, and discover what truly sustains us when our usual comforts fall away.

Join us for our final part of our current series, "No Fear In Love."

Join us for our current series, "No Fear In Love"

Join us for our series walking through the book of First John.

Join us for our Christmas service message! "Finding Room In the Ordinary"

Join us for our latest message, "The Process of Suffering"

Join us for our latest message, "When Everything is Shaken"

Redeeming “End Times” TheologyWhat if “the end times” were never meant to scare us—but to restore our hope? In this message, Pastor Brett reclaims the ancient Christian vision of apocatastasis—the restoration of all things.Drawing from early theologians and modern despair alike, he challenges fear-based rapture theology and invites us to see that the story of God ends not in destruction, but in renewal.✨ Love wins. All things are made new.#TheTableTX #ChristianHope #ProgressiveFaith #LoveWins

Join us for our final part of our current series, "The Good Book".

Join Us for week two of our current series

Join us for our series, "The Good Book: Fresh Insights for an Ancient Text"

Join us for our latest message, "The Battlefield of the Mind"

Join us for Pastor Brett's message, "The Emotional Shake"

How might seeing the world as sacred change how we live? In this message, Pastor Brett invites us to rediscover a sacramental view of creation—where everything around us reflects and participates in the life of God.

Join us for our new series, Disenchanted: Reclaiming Sacred Ground in a Disenchanted World

In this first Sunday of Lent, explore how this season invites both personal and communal transformation. Drawing from Deuteronomy 26 and real-life experiences, we'll see that our every response is preceded by God's abundant grace. Discover how genuine Lenten practice—rooted in gratitude, prayer, and a relaxed trust in God—can lead us into deeper faith and renewed life in Christ.