Episodes

Sunday Oct 13, 2013
Exodus 23:10-19: Remembering what God has Done (God the Hero)
Sunday Oct 13, 2013
Sunday Oct 13, 2013
Welcome to the 20th sermon in our series on how God has worked in history. (20 of 24)
When you hear the word hero, what comes to mind? Heroes of faith? Everyday heroes? War heroes? Superheroes? What about God? Some of us see God as a “dictator in the sky” that commands what will take place on earth. We may see God as removed and disinterested or like a cheerleader or a grandfather that spoils us. What informs your view of God? In this series we are going into the stories of the book of Exodus to examine real historical stories of real people dealing with real problems. We will discover who God truly is through what he has done.

Sunday Oct 06, 2013
Exodus 22:16-23:9: Justice, Hospitality, & Holiness (God the Hero)
Sunday Oct 06, 2013
Sunday Oct 06, 2013
Welcome to the 19th sermon in our series on how God has worked in history. (19 of 24)
When you hear the word hero, what comes to mind? Heroes of faith? Everyday heroes? War heroes? Superheroes? What about God? Some of us see God as a “dictator in the sky” that commands what will take place on earth. We may see God as removed and disinterested or like a cheerleader or a grandfather that spoils us. What informs your view of God? In this series we are going into the stories of the book of Exodus to examine real historical stories of real people dealing with real problems. We will discover who God truly is through what he has done.

Sunday Sep 22, 2013
Exodus 19 & 20: The Law Giver (God the Hero)
Sunday Sep 22, 2013
Sunday Sep 22, 2013
Welcome to the 17th sermon in our series on how God has worked in history. (17 of 24)
When you hear the word hero, what comes to mind? Heroes of faith? Everyday heroes? War heroes? Superheroes? What about God? Some of us see God as a “dictator in the sky” that commands what will take place on earth. We may see God as removed and disinterested or like a cheerleader or a grandfather that spoils us. What informs your view of God? In this series we are going into the stories of the book of Exodus to examine real historical stories of real people dealing with real problems. We will discover who God truly is through what he has done.

Sunday Sep 08, 2013
The Vision of Refuge
Sunday Sep 08, 2013
Sunday Sep 08, 2013
Welcome to this stand alone sermon on the story of Refuge Church.

Sunday Sep 01, 2013
Matthew 6:25-34: Sufficient for the Day (Rhythms)
Sunday Sep 01, 2013
Sunday Sep 01, 2013
Welcome to the 3rd sermon in our series on how we do daily life. (3 of 3)
Everybody these days wants to change the world. If you go to Amazon books and type the phrase “change the world,” there are no less than 14,500 results and nearly half of them are related to spiritually and religion. We see a world full of issues and think that this is our call, that we are supposed to change the world. In the book Culture Making, Andy Crouch writes, “Indeed I sometimes wonder if breathless rhetoric about changing the world is actually more about changing the subject from our own fitfully suppressed awareness that we didn’t ask to be brought into the world, and have only vaguely succeeded in figuring it out, and will end our days in radical dependence on something or someone other than ourselves. If our excitement about changing the world leads us into the grand illusion that we stand somehow outside the world knowing what’s best for it, tools and good will and gusto at the ready. We have not yet come to terms with the reality that world has changed us far more than we will ever change it.” As followers of Jesus we are not called to change the world; we are called to be changed. We are not called to do radically different things, but to do the things that we do radically differently.

Sunday Aug 25, 2013
Now That We Know Who We Are (Rhythms)
Sunday Aug 25, 2013
Sunday Aug 25, 2013
Welcome to the 2nd sermon in our series on how we do daily life. (2 of 3)
Everybody these days wants to change the world. If you go to Amazon books and type the phrase “change the world,” there are no less than 14,500 results and nearly half of them are related to spiritually and religion. We see a world full of issues and think that this is our call, that we are supposed to change the world. In the book Culture Making, Andy Crouch writes, “Indeed I sometimes wonder if breathless rhetoric about changing the world is actually more about changing the subject from our own fitfully suppressed awareness that we didn’t ask to be brought into the world, and have only vaguely succeeded in figuring it out, and will end our days in radical dependence on something or someone other than ourselves. If our excitement about changing the world leads us into the grand illusion that we stand somehow outside the world knowing what’s best for it, tools and good will and gusto at the ready. We have not yet come to terms with the reality that world has changed us far more than we will ever change it.” As followers of Jesus we are not called to change the world; we are called to be changed. We are not called to do radically different things, but to do the things that we do radically differently.

Sunday Aug 18, 2013
1 Peter 2:9-17: Be Before Do (Rhythms)
Sunday Aug 18, 2013
Sunday Aug 18, 2013
Welcome to the 1st sermon in our series on how we do daily life. (1 of 3)
Everybody these days wants to change the world. If you go to Amazon books and type the phrase “change the world,” there are no less than 14,500 results and nearly half of them are related to spiritually and religion. We see a world full of issues and think that this is our call, that we are supposed to change the world. In the book Culture Making, Andy Crouch writes, “Indeed I sometimes wonder if breathless rhetoric about changing the world is actually more about changing the subject from our own fitfully suppressed awareness that we didn’t ask to be brought into the world, and have only vaguely succeeded in figuring it out, and will end our days in radical dependence on something or someone other than ourselves. If our excitement about changing the world leads us into the grand illusion that we stand somehow outside the world knowing what’s best for it, tools and good will and gusto at the ready. We have not yet come to terms with the reality that world has changed us far more than we will ever change it.” As followers of Jesus we are not called to change the world; we are called to be changed. We are not called to do radically different things, but to do the things that we do radically differently.

Sunday Jul 14, 2013
2 Corinthians 5:11-21: How do we tell our Story? (Story Tellers)
Sunday Jul 14, 2013
Sunday Jul 14, 2013
Welcome to the 2nd sermon in our series on how to tell the story of the gospel. (2 of 2)
Everything has a story. The story that we believe that we are a part of is what shapes the way we see the world. It shapes how we see other people, how we see suffering, how we see joy and sorrow. William Kilpatrick writes, “The same impulse that makes us want our books to have a plot makes us want our lives to have a plot. We need to feel that we are getting somewhere, that we’re making progress. There’s something in us that’s not satisfied with the merely psychological explanation of our lives. It doesn’t do justice to our conviction that we are on some kind of journey or quest. There must be some deeper meaning to our lives than whether we feel good about ourselves.” How do we see our own story? How did we get here? What went wrong? What is our hope? And how do we retell our story to others?

Sunday Jul 07, 2013
2 Corinthians 5:17-21: What is our Story? (Story Tellers)
Sunday Jul 07, 2013
Sunday Jul 07, 2013
Welcome to the 1st sermon in our series on how to tell the story of the gospel. (1 of 2)
Everything has a story. The story that we believe that we are a part of is what shapes the way we see the world. It shapes how we see other people, how we see suffering, how we see joy and sorrow. William Kilpatrick writes, “The same impulse that makes us want our books to have a plot makes us want our lives to have a plot. We need to feel that we are getting somewhere, that we’re making progress. There’s something in us that’s not satisfied with the merely psychological explanation of our lives. It doesn’t do justice to our conviction that we are on some kind of journey or quest. There must be some deeper meaning to our lives than whether we feel good about ourselves.” How do we see our own story? How did we get here? What went wrong? What is our hope? And how do we retell our story to others?

Sunday Jun 30, 2013
Exodus 13:17-15:18: God's Deliverance (God the Hero)
Sunday Jun 30, 2013
Sunday Jun 30, 2013
Welcome to the 15th sermon in our series on how God has worked in history. (15 of 24)
When you hear the word hero, what comes to mind? Heroes of faith? Everyday heroes? War heroes? Superheroes? What about God? Some of us see God as a “dictator in the sky” that commands what will take place on earth. We may see God as removed and disinterested or like a cheerleader or a grandfather that spoils us. What informs your view of God? In this series we are going into the stories of the book of Exodus to examine real historical stories of real people dealing with real problems. We will discover who God truly is through what he has done.

