Twin Cities Grace Fellowship Sermons

Twin Cities Grace Fellowship

Listen to Twin Cities Grace Fellowship weekly sermons!

  1. 21 thg 6

    Centuries of Witness | Lesson 14

    What if the entire Bible is telling one unified story through two intertwined threads—God’s plan for glory in Christ and His plan to redeem sinners? In this sermon from Isaiah 42, “Centuries of Witness,” we trace how God has progressively revealed His eternal counsel “bit by bit” across the Law, the Psalms, and the Prophets. We explore the “eternal purpose” thread—God’s plan to place all authority in heaven and earth under Jesus Christ—and the “redemptive” thread—God’s answer to sin and death through the promised Seed. From Genesis to the Davidic covenant, through the Psalms and key prophetic passages, we see how themes of kingdom, dominion, resurrection, and worldwide blessing increasingly converge on the person of Christ. The message then walks through specific Old Testament prophecies that sharpen into remarkable detail: the virgin birth (Isaiah 7), the birthplace of the Messiah (Micah 5), His identity as God in the flesh and eternal King (Isaiah 9), and His atoning sufferings and substitutionary death (Isaiah 53). Along the way, we consider how these “former things” and “new things” validate God’s word, anticipate Christ’s cross and resurrection, and prepare for the final revelation of “the mystery” given to Paul. The sermon closes by urging us to read Scripture with this big-picture lens, to understand where we fit in God’s unfolding purpose, and to respond with the contrite, believing heart God looks for today.

    1 giờ 5 phút
  2. 17 thg 6

    Watch and Be Sober | Lesson 11

    Are you living like a child of the day—or drifting along with a world that thinks it’s safe in the dark? In this sermon from 1 Thessalonians 5:1–11, we explore Paul’s teaching on “the day of the Lord” and how it connects to the broader biblical storyline in both Old and New Testaments. Pastor unpacks the meaning of “times and seasons,” the imagery of the day of the Lord coming “as a thief in the night,” and the world’s deceptive cry of “peace and safety” just before sudden, inescapable destruction. Along the way, he traces key Old Testament and Gospel passages (Joel, Amos, Matthew 24, Luke 21, 2 Peter 3) to show how this coming day brings both judgment and salvation, and how the Thessalonians could “know perfectly” about it yet still be troubled by false teaching. From there, the message turns to the believer’s identity and calling: we are not in darkness, but are “children of light” and “of the day.” That identity carries a clear exhortation—“let us not sleep, as do others; but let us watch and be sober.” Paul’s imagery of spiritual armor (the breastplate of faith and love, and the helmet of the hope of salvation) ties directly to the “work of faith, labor of love, and patience of hope” already seen in the letter. Because God has not appointed us to wrath, but to obtain salvation through our Lord Jesus Christ, this coming day should not terrify us but shape how we walk now. The sermon closes by calling believers to live in a way that matches their calling—alert, sober, and comforted—so that we might truly “live together with Him” as we await His coming.

    56 phút
  3. 14 thg 6

    The Secret and the Revealed | Lesson 13

    How does the whole Bible fit together as one unified plan in Christ rather than a collection of disconnected stories? In this sermon from the series “That Which May Be Known,” we trace God’s eternal counsel from before the foundation of the world into history through progressive revelation. Beginning with Babel and the call of Abram in Genesis 11–12, we see two main threads emerge and develop: God’s purpose to gather all things in heaven and earth in Christ, and His plan of redemption to deal with sin entirely through Christ, not human effort. The message highlights how God scattered the nations, chose Abraham, promised a seed through whom all families of the earth would be blessed, and began to disclose both kingdom authority and redemption in seed form—while many details still remained hidden. From there, the sermon follows these threads through the law and the Psalms, showing how the sacrificial system, the Passover, and the Day of Atonement were shadows pointing to the true substitute, the Lamb of God. Psalm 22 and Psalm 16 are opened as stunning prophetic disclosures of Christ’s crucifixion, forsakenness, burial, and resurrection, while Psalm 8 reveals the dominion purpose vested in man and ultimately fulfilled in Christ. Throughout, Deuteronomy 29:29 frames the balance between God’s secret things and what He has now revealed, culminating in our present privilege: we live in the fullness of revelation, with God’s purpose in Christ and His redemptive plan fully made known.

    1 giờ 5 phút
  4. 7 thg 6

    From Eden to Expectation | Lesson 12

    What if creation isn’t just a backdrop to history, but God’s first great act of revealing His eternal purpose in Christ? In this message, Pastor Josh Strelecki launches the third part of the series “That Which May Be Known,” titled “God Hath Revealed,” showing how God’s counsel before the world began begins to unfold from Genesis onward. Starting from Luke 24 and Ephesians 1, he traces the “eternal purpose thread” through creation—heaven and earth, authority, dominion, and family—and shows how all of it was designed to be gathered together in Christ. Creation week is presented not as random or merely functional, but as the initial disclosure of God’s plan to invest all things in His Son and to share His rule with a redeemed divine family. From there, the sermon moves into Genesis 3, where sin enters and the “redemption thread” is introduced by the first promise of the seed of the woman who will crush the serpent’s head. Pastor Josh explains how the fall fractures man’s dominion, marriage, family, work, and government, and yet God immediately begins revealing His redemptive plan that will one day reconcile all things in heaven and earth through Christ. Along the way, he connects these truths to our everyday lives—marriage, parenting, government, and personal struggle—calling believers to find their identity, stability, and hope not in earthly systems or politics, but in God’s revealed purpose in Christ that answers where we came from, what we’re here for, and where we’re going.

    59 phút
  5. 3 thg 6

    Abound More and More | Lesson 9

    Are you confident you know how to walk and actually please God—or do those phrases feel vague and unattainable? In this sermon from 1 Thessalonians 4:1–12, we explore Paul’s call not just to walk in a way that pleases the Lord, but to “abound more and more” in that walk. Building on Romans 8 and 12, the message unpacks the basic mechanics of the Christian life: how the Spirit uses God’s Word to renew our minds, direct our bodies, and move us from merely knowing our identity in Christ to actually living it out. We also examine the difference between positional holiness (who we are in Christ) and practical holiness (how we live), and how God’s will—our sanctification—shapes every area of life. Paul’s warnings about “fornication,” coveting, and defrauding are applied beyond sexual sin to dishonest, self-serving patterns in daily life, including work and business. The sermon presses into how lust, greed, and fraud reflect the way “Gentiles which know not God” live, and why believers must instead “possess [their] vessel in sanctification and honor.” Finally, we consider what genuine brotherly love looks like: being “taught of God to love one another,” increasing in love beyond the local church, studying to be quiet, minding our own affairs, working with our own hands, and walking honestly toward those outside. All of this is set in the larger context of God calling us not to uncleanness, but to holiness, as we await the coming of Christ.

    1 giờ 3 phút

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Listen to Twin Cities Grace Fellowship weekly sermons!