All The Saints

All Saints Albion Park Anglican Church

A podcast by All Saints Albion Park Anglican Church. An Anglican Church in the Sydney Diocese.

  1. Sermon - 4. Remember the Sabbath - Exodus 20:1-11

    4D AGO

    Sermon - 4. Remember the Sabbath - Exodus 20:1-11

    Sermon Series: The Ten CommandmentsSermon Title: 4. Remember the SabbathBible Passage: Exodus 20:1–11Preacher: Robin VonkDate & Time: Sunday, 22 February 2026 | 9:30 am In Exodus 20:1–11, the command to remember the Sabbath stands as both a gift and a challenge. In a restless world driven by productivity and pressure, God calls His people to stop, to rest, and to trust. The Sabbath is not merely about a day off—it is about remembering who God is, what He has done, and where true life is found. We see that this command is rooted in creation and redemption. God rested after His work of creation, setting a rhythm of work and worship into the fabric of life. He also rescued His people from slavery, reminding them that they are no longer defined by endless labour but by His saving grace. Yet the Sabbath ultimately points beyond itself to the gospel. We often live as though everything depends on us—our effort, our control, our success. But in Jesus Christ, the work that truly matters has already been accomplished. Through His life, death, and resurrection, Jesus secures our salvation, inviting us into a deeper rest: freedom from striving to earn God’s favour. He calls the weary to come to Him and find rest for their souls. As part of The Ten Commandments series, this sermon will help us rediscover Sabbath not as a burden, but as a blessing. It is a weekly reminder that God is Creator, Redeemer, and Sustainer—and that in Christ, we can cease from our anxious labour and trust in His finished work.

    37 min
  2. Sermon - 3. You shall not take the name of the LORD your God in vain - Exodus 20:1-7

    FEB 14

    Sermon - 3. You shall not take the name of the LORD your God in vain - Exodus 20:1-7

    Sermon Series: The Ten CommandmentsSermon Title: 3. You Shall Not Take the Name of the LORD Your God in VainBible Passage: Exodus 20:1–7Preacher: Robin VonkDate & Time: Sunday, 15 February 2026 | 9:30 am God’s name is not just a word—it reveals His character, His covenant love, and His holy authority. In Exodus 20:1–7, the third commandment calls God’s people to honour His name, refusing to misuse it in careless speech, empty promises, or hypocritical living. In this sermon, we will see that this command reaches far beyond avoiding certain phrases. It confronts the way we represent God with our words, our worship, and our lives. To bear His name is a privilege—but it is also a responsibility. This sermon will also show how the gospel speaks into our failure. We have not honoured God’s name as we should. We have spoken lightly, lived inconsistently, and at times claimed His name without reflecting His heart. Yet Jesus perfectly honoured His Father’s name. In every word and deed, Christ revealed the glory of God without distortion. At the cross, He bore the judgment we deserve for dishonouring God, and through His resurrection, He restores us to a life that reflects God’s holiness and grace. As part of The Ten Commandments series, this message will invite us to treasure God’s name, to speak it with reverence, and to live in a way that brings Him honour. Empowered by the gospel, we are not only warned against misuse—we are called into joyful witness, bearing His name faithfully before the world.

    27 min
  3. Sermon - 2. You shall not make for yourself an idol - Exodus 20:1-6

    FEB 7

    Sermon - 2. You shall not make for yourself an idol - Exodus 20:1-6

    Sermon Series: The Ten CommandmentsSermon Title: 2. You Shall Not Make for Yourself an IdolBible Passage: Exodus 20:1–6Preacher: Robin VonkDate & Time: Sunday, 8 February 2026 | 6:00pm The second commandment goes deeper than what we worship—it confronts how we worship. In Exodus 20:1–6, God forbids His people from making images to represent Him or replacing Him with something they can see, shape, or control. At its heart, this command reveals a God who cannot be reduced, managed, or remade in our image. In this sermon, we will explore how idolatry is not only about statues and shrines but also about distorting God to fit our preferences. Even well-intentioned hearts can create a god who is safer, more convenient, or more comfortable than the living Lord who reveals Himself in His word. This sermon will show how the gospel speaks directly into this struggle. Left to ourselves, we reshape God and give our devotion to created things. But God, in grace, makes Himself known—not through an image, but through a person. Jesus Christ is the true image of the invisible God. In His life, death, and resurrection, God reveals His holiness, mercy, and love in a way no idol ever could. Through Christ, we are forgiven for false worship and restored to a right relationship with the God who shows steadfast love to thousands who love Him. As part of The Ten Commandments series, this message will call us to reject false images of God and to worship Him as He truly is—listening to His voice, trusting His character, and delighting in the grace He has revealed in Jesus.

    37 min
  4. Sermon - 1. You shall have no other gods before me - Exodus 20:1-3

    FEB 1

    Sermon - 1. You shall have no other gods before me - Exodus 20:1-3

    Sermon Series: The Ten CommandmentsSermon Title: 1. You Shall Have No Other Gods Before MeBible Passage: Exodus 20:1–3Preacher: Robin VonkDate & Time: Sunday, 1 February 2026 | 6:00pm The Ten Commandments do not begin with rules, but with grace. Before God calls His people to obedience, He reminds them that He is the Lord who rescued them from slavery. In this sermon, Robin will explore the first and foundational commandment—and why it still speaks powerfully to our hearts today. In Exodus 20:1–3, God declares His exclusive claim on His people’s worship. He alone is worthy of trust, devotion, and allegiance. Yet this command also exposes how easily our hearts turn to lesser gods (i.e. security, success, comfort, relationships, or control), looking to them for the life only God can give. This sermon will show how the gospel fulfils this commandment. We have all failed to love God above all else, but Jesus never did. Where we have placed other gods before the Lord, Christ remained perfectly faithful. Through His life, death, and resurrection, Jesus frees us not only from guilt but from the false gods that enslave us. In Him, we are forgiven and invited back into wholehearted worship of the one true God. As we begin The Ten Commandments series, this message will help us see that God’s law is not a burden, but a gift—calling us away from what cannot save and toward the only God who truly gives life.

    31 min
  5. Sermon - Boldness in the Face of Opposition | Mitch Cornford - Acts 4:1-21

    JAN 25

    Sermon - Boldness in the Face of Opposition | Mitch Cornford - Acts 4:1-21

    Sermon Series: Witnesses for ChristSermon Title: Boldness in the Face of OppositionBible Passage: Acts 4:1–21Preacher: Mitch CornfordDate & Time: Sunday, 25 January 2026 | 6:00 pm In Acts 4, the first miracle-fuelled witness of the church is met not with celebration, but with resistance. Peter and John are arrested, questioned, and warned to stop speaking in the name of Jesus. Yet instead of retreating in fear, they speak with remarkable clarity and courage. Boldness in the Face of Opposition explores where that courage comes from—and why it still matters today. At the heart of their boldness is the gospel itself. Peter proclaims that Jesus Christ, whom the leaders crucified, has been raised from the dead by God, and that salvation is found in no one else. The same name that brought healing to a broken man now stands as the only hope for a broken world. Opposition cannot silence this message, because it is rooted in the power of the risen Christ. This sermon will show that gospel boldness is not confidence in ourselves, but trust in Jesus. The apostles are ordinary, untrained men, yet their courage exposes an extraordinary reality: they have been with Jesus. Even when threatened, they choose obedience to God over approval from people, convinced that what they have seen and heard cannot be kept quiet. As part of the Witnesses for Christ series, this message will challenge and encourage us to stand firm in our faith. In a world that may resist the claims of Christ, we are called to speak the truth in love, trusting that the same gospel that sustained the early church still gives boldness, hope, and life today.

    24 min
  6. Sermon - Who Holds the Power? | Joe Upton - Acts 4:1-21

    JAN 24

    Sermon - Who Holds the Power? | Joe Upton - Acts 4:1-21

    Sermon Series: Witnesses for ChristSermon Title: Who Holds the Power?Bible Passage: Acts 4:1–21Preacher: Joe UptonDate & Time: Sunday, 25 January 2026 | 9:30am In Acts 4, the joyful witness of the early church collides head-on with opposition and authority. Peter and John are arrested, questioned, and warned by the very powers that once condemned Jesus. Yet the real question beneath the tension is this: who truly holds the power? In Acts 4, we will see that although religious and political leaders appear to control the situation, the authority of God cannot be silenced. Filled with the Holy Spirit, Peter boldly proclaims the gospel: Jesus Christ—crucified by human hands and raised by God—is the cornerstone, and salvation is found in no one else. The risen Jesus stands at the centre of their courage, their message, and their hope. This passage reminds us that the gospel often provokes resistance because it challenges false sources of power and security. Human authority can threaten, intimidate, and restrain—but it cannot forgive sins, raise the dead, or change hearts. Only Jesus has that power. The same Lord rejected by the leaders is the One God has exalted, offering salvation and new life to all who trust in Him. This sermon will encourage us to consider where we place our confidence. Like the apostles, we are called to obey God rather than people, to speak what we have seen and heard, and to trust that the power of the gospel is greater than any opposition we may face.

    35 min
  7. Sermon - The Unexpected and Unsurprising Healing | Isaac Baker - Acts 3

    JAN 18

    Sermon - The Unexpected and Unsurprising Healing | Isaac Baker - Acts 3

    Sermon Series: Witnesses for Christ Sermon Title: The Unexpected and Unsurprising Healing Bible Passage: Acts 3 Preacher: Isaac Baker Date & Time: Sunday, 18 January 2026 | 6:00pm In Acts 3, God works in a way that is both startling and strangely familiar. A man who has never walked is suddenly healed—and yet, for those who know the heart of God, this act of power is no surprise at all. In The Unexpected and Unsurprising Healing, we will explore how this miracle captures the very nature of the gospel: God interrupting ordinary life with extraordinary grace. The healing at the temple gate is unexpected for the man who asks only for coins, but unsurprising because it flows from the name of Jesus Christ. Peter makes clear that this restoration does not come from human strength or spiritual effort, but from faith in the risen Jesus—the One whom the people rejected, crucified, and yet whom God raised from the dead. This sermon will trace how the miracle becomes a message. The crowd is confronted with their sin, yet also invited into hope. Through repentance and faith, God offers forgiveness, renewal, and “times of refreshing” through Christ. The same Jesus who healed a broken body now offers healing for broken hearts, calling all people to turn to Him and live. As part of the Witnesses for Christ series, this message will remind us that the gospel still surprises the spiritually poor, while remaining wonderfully consistent with who God has always been—gracious, powerful, and faithful to save. We are called, like Peter and John, to be witnesses who point beyond the miracle to Jesus, the crucified and risen Saviour, in whose name true healing is found.

    28 min

About

A podcast by All Saints Albion Park Anglican Church. An Anglican Church in the Sydney Diocese.