Eternity Church PodCast

Eternity Church

Biblically-based teachings from services held at Eternity Church where we are gathering the nations to worship and imitate Christ. Come worship with us Sunday mornings at 10:00 AM at 1200 Wilmington Avenue, Richmond VA 23227 http://www.eternitychurch.org/

  1. FEB 2

    January 25, 2026 - Epiphany 2026 Series (4)

    A Sunday morning sermon by Pastor Brett Deal. It’s natural when we experience sickness, or see someone we love suffering, to long for healing. We go in search of relief. We ask others if they’ve encountered similar symptoms. We book appointments. We even search for answers from websites and computer collations (ironically referred to as intelligence). The reality is when we suffer, we want solutions. But often because we don’t know the depths of our maladies, we end up treating symptoms on the surface rather than the inner, unseen disease. Like the woman hemorrhaging blood for twelve years, we go from doctor to doctor desperate for a cure, spending everything we have, only to find ourselves worse off than before (Matthew 9.20-22; Mark 5.26). Cosmetic remedies leave us emotionally depleted when they fail to fix what’s broken within. When we come to the end of ourselves, when the solutions of the internet and the internist leave us without answers, we look beyond the natural to the supernatural. Scripture tells us Jesus came to heal us, and not just the sickness on the surface but the sin deep within. Jesus speaks over us with all authority and restores us with all gentleness, healing our broken hearts and binding up our wounds (Psalm 147.3). Matthew wrote of a paralytic man brought to Jesus who’d been “thrown” onto his sick bed (Greek: balló). He wasn’t tossed roughly there by his friends who brought him to Jesus but violently thrust there by his disease. No doubt, knowing the nature of crowds, some thought they knew this man’s sin, and saw his sickness as just punishment (Exodus 15.26). Forgiving little, they loved little, feeling the pain of the paralytic little (Luke 7.47). But for those of us who’ve found great freedom and healing in Jesus Christ’s love, we rejoice in His command to get up and walk! We bow down in awe and praise God (Matthew 9.8)! Beloved, may we, who have been greatly loved, love all people with the good news of our Great Physician. May we speak straight to the heart of the hurting that Jesus our Healer also forgives our sin!

    13 min
  2. FEB 2

    January 18, 2026 - Epiphany 2026 Series (3)

    A Sunday morning service by Pastor Brett Deal. It’s interesting to ask people what they know about Jesus. When you get a chance this week, slip it into conversation and see what they say. Most people who are asked about David will know about Goliath. Those who are asked about Joseph might mention his coat of many colors. Many, when asked about Jesus, think about the sea. Jesus in the boat with his disciples. Jesus walking on the water. Jesus calming the sea. That’s a great place to start! You might know the story of Jesus calming the sea well, but what might be surprising to you, even if you've followed Jesus for years, is the immediate context of the story. After delivering the Sermon on the Mount and healing several outsiders (the Jewish leper, the Roman Centurion’s servant, and Peter’s mother-in-law), Jesus told His disciples it was time to “go to the other side” (Matthew 8.18). The Gospel tells us when Jesus “got into the boat, his disciples followed Him” (8.23). That’s a beautiful sentiment. It’s worthy of being stitched onto a grandmother’s throw pillow or one of those fancy calligraphy paintings in a crafts store. It’s beautiful, but dangerous! No sooner do they follow Jesus from shore (and Jesus finally gets a moment to rest from the constant demands of ministry) all hell breaks loose! The Sea of Galilee was known for extreme storms, but this is something else. Matthew says a mega seismos swelled up. The word seismos is most commonly associated with earthquakes (8.24). This is no ordinary storm, and following Jesus led His disciples right into it. Perhaps you’re in the middle of a storm, and you feel like you’re not going to make it through. You’re angry with God because following Him led you here and you’re losing hope! Take a breath. Cry out your prayer to Jesus in the storm and anchor your faith Him anew because, friend, it’s in the storm where we meet with Jesus who is fully God and fully man. He knows what we’re going through. He’s been through it too. Yes, and Jesus is fully God because by the power of His voice He commands the winds and waves to be still. It is in the boat beyond the safety of shore we behold Jesus who is our Savior (Jude 1.24-25).

    29 min
  3. JAN 16

    January 4, 2026 - Epiphany 2026 (1)

    A Sunday sermon by Pastor Brett Deal. Tonight, we sit on the water’s edge of a new year. With the sun set and moonlight piercing the darkness, we watch the slow ripple on the waves of yesterday and watch for dawn. It may not seem it, but the hours before sunrise are some of the best for fishing. This silent time lit soft by stars is the perfect time to cast wide our net into the new year. I’m not talking about new year’s resolutions that only last a day or two. I’m talking about epiphany! Epiphany is the culmination of prolonged effort—like wisemen from the East making their long journey to Bethlehem or a faithful fisherman patiently casting out His net. At the beginning of last year, Jesus enlightened us with his preaching (Matthew 5-7). On a mountainside He spoke light and life, opening our eyes and ears and illuminating our hearts. Now, Jesus will come down from the mountain and walk among us, living His message into our world (Matthew 8.1). As we set out with Jesus the Messiah, would you enter this new year challenged by our fourth century sibling, Chromatius of Aquila, who wrote: “‘The kingdom of heaven is near.’ So do you want the kingdom of heaven to also be near for you? Prepare these ways in your heart, in your senses and in your soul. Pave within you the way of purity, the way of faith and the way of holiness. Build roads of justice. Remove every scandal of offense from your heart. For it is written: ‘Remove the stones from the road.’ And then, indeed, through the thoughts of your heart and the very movements of your soul, Christ the King will enter along certain paths,” (emphasis added). Beloved, the King and His Kingdom are near, so let us begin this new year intently going through the gates, preparing the way for all people, building up the way of the Lord to dwell among us (Isaiah 62.10). Let us join Jesus in the journey as He casts the net wide.

    26 min
  4. JAN 15

    Episode 266: December 28, 2025 - Advent Series (Week 5)

    A Sunday morning sermon by Pastor Brett Deal. Time is a funny thing. Think about it. There are times minutes feel like months, and seconds unending seasons of waiting. Then, there are sparkling decades which rush by in a blink of an eye. When our kids were little, the constant refrain we heard was “Don’t blink, before you know it…” You know the rest. Friend, I blinked. When my eyes opened, our newborns were all teenagers! Tonight is Christmas Eve. It’s been one short trip around the sun since our last candlelit service, singing our Advent songs. It’s also been two millennia since Jesus was born to a virgin and placed gently in a manger (Luke 2.7). For two thousand years we’ve celebrated that Christ has come, born among us, bringing salvation into our world (John 3.17). Our present is anchored in this past tense fulfillment! But now, consider what it must have been like for those eagerly awaiting the first Advent! Let’s not take for granted how blessed we are to have seen and heard this good news (Matthew 13.16)! “For truly,” when we stop and think about it, many prophets and righteous people longed to see and hear what we have seen and heard (Matthew 13.17). Day after day, century after century, they waited for the Messiah to arrive. They set their hope on the prophetic word the Holy Spirit was speaking into their lives. They believed for what they did not see, trusting the faithfulness of God. And then, in Bethlehem, all of a sudden—long-awaited—Christ was born. Are we surprised a weary world rejoiced with this thrill of hope?! Friend, we gather this Holy Night, placing ourselves with the prophets of old, expectant for the first Advent (1 Peter 1.10-12). And with a thrill of hope in His first Advent we wait all the more expectantly for His return! Indeed, His second Advent might be today! So come rejoicing for "His law is love and His gospel is peace." Let’s take the time, while there is still time before us, and "let all within us praise His holy name!" Merry Christmas!

    31 min
  5. JAN 15

    Episode 264: December 21, 2025 - Advent Series (Week 4)

    A Sunday morning sermon by Pastor Brett Deal. Can you imagine what it must have been like in Jerusalem when the wise men showed up? Children fetching water. Merchants selling in the market. Scribes dutifully copying the biblical scrolls for synagogues near and far. Priests serving in the Temple. Meanwhile, King Herod, is looking over his shoulder to see what family member he needs to kill next. Like a neurotic groundhog, whenever Herod saw his shadow, someone suspiciously drowned, was strangled, or ended up in a vat of honey. Maybe that day started out like any other…that is until these foreign wise men rolled into town seeking a royal audience, searching for the new king of the Jews. This sent Herod—the current king of the Jews—into a rage, and everybody in Jerusalem felt it (Matthew 2.3)! Upsetting news like this required a general assembly of the religious elites. Herod called for the chief priests and scribes to reveal through their scrolls where this Messiah was to be born (2.4). Steeped in Scripture, they unveiled the answer from Micah the prophet (Micah 5.2). They knew the promise of the Messiah, foretold to David who would reign over God’s people forever (2 Samuel 7.14). He would be a Shepherd King (2 Samuel 5.2), born in Bethlehem, the little hamlet of David’s own birth. How unnerving it must have been to tell the temperamental Herod the answer to his question! The stark contrast must have been unsettling to share. According to Leslie Allen, “It is within this drab frame of royal misfortune that Micah sets a glorious picture of royal majesty. The figure of failure of verse one stands as a foil to his radiant counterpart here.” The Lord was bringing a true king for His people, a Shepherd King for His sheep in Israel and among all nations (Micah 7.14-15; John 10.16). If you’re Herod, or someone benefiting from his governance, this news spells disaster. But, if you are poor, seeking relief, oppressed in search of solace, if you are wise men from the East following a star, this is absolutely good news! The Advent of the Messiah is the promise of a Shepherd who cares, who brings healing with His touch and peace in His reign (Malachi 4.2; Matthew 11.28-30).

    26 min

Ratings & Reviews

4.7
out of 5
9 Ratings

About

Biblically-based teachings from services held at Eternity Church where we are gathering the nations to worship and imitate Christ. Come worship with us Sunday mornings at 10:00 AM at 1200 Wilmington Avenue, Richmond VA 23227 http://www.eternitychurch.org/