Grace City Eugene

Grace City Eugene

Grace City Eugene exists to help everyone in our sphere of influence encounter Christ, experience Biblical community, and extend God's Kingdom. Learn more about us at www.gracecityeugene.com If we can help you in any way, reach out to hello@gracecityeugene.com

  1. -4 Ч

    How To Lose Your Faith: Start Strong, Drift Fast

    In this first week of our series, How To Ruin Your Faith, we’re reminded that faith doesn’t usually fall apart all at once—it drifts. Like swimmers slowly carried by a current, nothing feels wrong at first. Everything seems normal. But over time, we can find ourselves far from where we started. In our walk with Jesus, drift is subtle. It shows up in small shifts—less time in Scripture, less prayer, slowly justifying things we once felt convicted about. Paul’s response in Galatians is urgent because this kind of drift can happen quickly, and often without us realizing it. In our church family, this invites us to honestly ask: where have we grown casual in areas that once mattered deeply? As we grow together in faith, we’re called to be re-anchored in the true gospel—Jesus plus nothing. The Galatians didn’t reject Jesus; they added to Him. And we can do the same by mixing in performance, approval, personal truth, or control. But the gospel isn’t about what we bring—it’s about what Jesus has already done. When we start reshaping truth, building identity apart from Christ, or seeking acceptance over faithfulness, we begin to drift. So the question isn’t just, “Do I believe in Jesus?” but “Is Jesus enough for me?” The good news is no matter how far we’ve drifted, we’re never too far gone. Jesus is enough, and He is always ready to lead us back and re-anchor our lives in His truth.

    40 мин.
  2. 6 АПР.

    Easter 2026: Come Alive (Chris Zauner)

    In this powerful 2026 Easter sermon, Pastor Chris Zauner delivers a compelling message titled “Come Alive,” exploring what it truly means to be restored to life through Jesus Christ. Centered on Luke 15 and the parable of the prodigal son, this message reveals a deeper truth about our relationship with God: that you can feel far from Him whether you are running away or simply going through the motions. This Resurrection Sunday message challenges both the spiritually distant and the spiritually exhausted. Whether you feel disconnected because of past mistakes or stuck in a routine of religious performance without joy, this sermon reminds us that God is not waiting for perfection—He is inviting us home. Through the lens of the loving Father in Luke 15, we see a picture of grace, restoration, and the heart of God who eagerly runs toward us. Pastor Chris unpacks the tension between rebellion and religion, showing how both can lead to distance from God. But the good news of Easter is that Jesus made a way for us to come alive again. His death and resurrection paid the cost so that we could experience true relationship, freedom, and fullness of life. This message is an invitation to stop striving, stop running, and step into the life God has already prepared for you. The question is not whether you are invited—the question is, will you come in? If this message speaks to you, share it with someone who needs hope this Easter season.

    37 мин.
  3. 29 МАР.

    Escape the Trap: Reconciliation (Chris Zauner)

    In the final week of Escape the Trap, Pastor Chris Zauner brings a compelling and deeply challenging message on reconciliation—inviting us to move beyond simply understanding forgiveness and into actively living it out. This message presses into the reality that while offense is inevitable, remaining trapped in it is not God’s plan for our lives. Through the words of Jesus in Matthew 5, we are reminded of the urgency and responsibility we carry in making things right. Reconciliation is not optional for those who want to walk closely with God—it is essential. Pastor Chris unpacks how many of us remain stuck in cycles of hurt, not because we are weak, but because we are untrained spiritually. Instead of avoiding conflict or hard conversations, we are called to prepare our hearts, strengthen our spirits, and respond in ways that reflect Christ. This sermon draws a clear and important distinction between forgiveness and reconciliation. Forgiveness is freely given, just as Christ forgave us on the cross—but reconciliation requires humility, action, and a willingness to pursue peace. It challenges the common mindset of waiting for others to make things right and instead calls us to take the first step, creating an atmosphere of grace and kindness that opens the door for healing. With honesty and personal insight, Pastor Chris shares how real healing begins when we choose to pray for those who have hurt us—not with surface-level words, but with genuine compassion. Over time, this kind of obedience transforms our hearts, restores clarity, and allows wounds to heal from the inside out. Ultimately, this message is an invitation to stop agreeing with truth and start living it. It calls each of us to release offense, pursue reconciliation, and embrace the freedom that Jesus has already secured. As far as it depends on us, we are urged to live at peace with everyone—trusting God to work in the places we cannot control. If you’ve been carrying unresolved hurt, tension, or offense, this message will both challenge and equip you to take your next step toward healing, wholeness, and restored relationships. 🙏 Like, comment, and subscribe for more messages that help you grow in faith and walk in freedom. #Reconciliation #EscapeTheTrap #PastorChrisZauner #Forgiveness #ChristianSermon #Faith #SpiritualGrowth

    39 мин.
  4. 15 МАР.

    Escape the Trap: The Revenge Trap (Chris Zauner)

    The Revenge Trap | Escape the Trap – Week 4 | Pastor Chris Zauner In Week 4 of our Escape the Trap series, Pastor Chris Zauner unpacks one of the most dangerous spiritual traps believers face: the trap of revenge and self-vindication. When we are hurt, misunderstood, or treated unfairly, our instinct is often to defend ourselves, retaliate, or seek justice on our own terms. But Scripture calls us to a radically different response. Teaching from Romans 12:17–19, Pastor Chris explores what it means to trust God as our defender instead of taking revenge into our own hands. Through powerful biblical examples—including Jesus before Pilate, David and Saul, and Joseph’s story of betrayal—this message reveals how choosing faith over retaliation leads to true freedom from offense. If you’ve ever struggled with bitterness, injustice, or the need to prove yourself right, this sermon will challenge and encourage you to release your case to God and walk in the freedom Christ offers. Key Topics in This Sermon: The biblical command to repay no evil for evilWhy revenge keeps us trapped in offenseHow Jesus modeled trusting the Father with injusticeThe difference between reacting in the flesh vs responding in faithWhy God’s justice often looks different than we expectHow releasing bitterness opens the door for blessing and reconciliationGod promises, “Vengeance is mine, I will repay.” When we trust Him rather than defend ourselves, we step into the freedom He designed for us. Watch now and discover how to escape The Revenge Trap.

    44 мин.
  5. 2 МАР.

    Crossing Over (Pastor Chris Zauner)

    In this special one-off message, Pastor Chris Zauner brings a timely and prophetic word for our final worship gathering in this space as we prepare to move into our new location. Titled “Crossing Over,” this send off sermon isn’t centered on nostalgia or simply changing buildings, but on the faith required to step from what’s familiar into what God has promised. Drawing from Joshua 3:12–17, Pastor Chris reminds us that there is always a river between promise and possession, and that God often brings His people to the edge of what feels impossible so the miracle becomes unmistakable. Israel stood before the Jordan at flood stage, not because they had missed God, but because they were standing at the threshold of fulfillment. In the same way, this moment for our church is not the end of something, but the edge of something, and the question isn’t whether we are ready, but whether we will step forward in obedience. This sermon highlights that the water didn’t move first, the people did. The priests carrying the ark stepped into the river while it was still raging, and only then did God stop the waters. Pastor Chris challenges us to recognize that faith doesn’t wait for perfect conditions, and that miracles are often connected to movement. As a church, we’ve prayed for more capacity, more room for kingdom work, and more opportunity for people to meet Jesus, and God has answered. But answered prayers still demand faith, especially when it means leaving comfort, routine, and familiarity behind. “Crossing Over” also reframes why we’re moving by making it clear that this isn’t about comfort, convenience, or upgrading our experience. It’s about mission. The crossing in Joshua wasn’t just for the people standing there that day, it was for the next generation and for the nations to know the power of God. In the same way, every new seat and every new opportunity represents people in our city who are anxious, skeptical, disconnected, hurting, or far from God, and this move is about reaching them. We are not crossing for ourselves; we are crossing for others, and we are crossing into a calling, not a monument. Pastor Chris also warns us not to bring a wilderness mentality into a promise season. In Joshua 5, the manna stops after the people eat from the fruit of the promised land, signaling a shift from survival to stewardship, from simply getting through to building what God has prepared. This message calls our church to leave behind passive faith and consumer Christianity and to step into a season of intentional discipleship, service, generosity, prayer, leadership, and invitation. The invitation is not merely to attend a new space, but to consecrate ourselves and participate in what God is doing as we cross over together. The sermon closes with a practical and powerful commissioning moment as the church is asked to write down at least five names of people who don’t know Jesus or are disconnected from the church, committing to pray for them and intentionally invite them into the next season, leading into Easter. Together, we lift these names to the Lord, believing for salvation, baptisms, prodigals coming home, softened hearts, and a city that recognizes the mighty hand of God. This is our moment to step into the river, trust the Lord to make a way, and move forward with faith as we cross over.

    33 мин.

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Grace City Eugene exists to help everyone in our sphere of influence encounter Christ, experience Biblical community, and extend God's Kingdom. Learn more about us at www.gracecityeugene.com If we can help you in any way, reach out to hello@gracecityeugene.com

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