Sunday Sermons

Ashland City Church of Christ

Welcome to Sunday Sermons – your midweek connection to what matters most. Each episode features the sermon from our Sunday gathering at Ashland City Church of Christ, offering you a chance to catch up, reflect deeper, or share the message with someone who needs it. We know life gets busy. Whether you were chasing toddlers during the sermon, out of town, or just want to listen again without the distractions, this podcast is for you. Expect biblical teaching, honest reflection, and practical encouragement—always rooted in Scripture, always pointing to Jesus. No pews, no pressure—just real messages for real life, delivered straight to your headphones. New episodes drop every week.

  1. 6d ago

    Persevering Through Guilt

    Everyone faces moments when guilt and shame make them want to give up entirely. Whether from betraying someone's trust, failing to meet expectations, or walking a crooked path away from what's right, these feelings can be crushing. Psalm 32 offers profound insight into dealing with our deepest failures and finding genuine freedom. The psalm identifies three Hebrew words that capture the full scope of human failure: transgression (betrayal of trust), sin (missing the mark), and iniquity (twisted corruption). Yet against these failures, God offers three beautiful responses - He forgives by carrying our sin away, covers our shame like clothing, and erases our debt from His ledger entirely. The blessed life described in this psalm isn't a life without mistakes, but a life that experiences complete forgiveness. When we try to handle guilt on our own, it creates a destructive cycle. Unconfessed guilt literally wastes us away, leading to self-hatred, blame projection, resentment toward others, and eventually resentment toward God himself. The path to freedom requires honest confession without deceit, trusting that God wants to forgive us and carry our burdens away. This forgiveness cost Jesus His life but is freely offered to us. The real question isn't whether we can forgive ourselves, but whether we believe God when He promises He has forgiven us through Christ's sacrifice. Only by trusting in His complete forgiveness can we break free from shame and move forward in faith.

    28 min
  2. May 10

    Persevering Through Trials

    Every family faces the delicate balance between protecting loved ones and preparing them for life's inevitable challenges. The book of Psalms provides profound wisdom for navigating this tension while building genuine resilience in our homes. Rather than leaving our children surprised and unprepared when difficulties arise, we can use the Psalms to shape realistic expectations about life while pointing to our ultimate source of strength. Psalm 57 reveals David seeking refuge during one of his most difficult seasons, teaching us that storms are not a matter of if but when they will come. When we expect this reality, we're less likely to make poor decisions based on shock or fear. David demonstrates how to take refuge in God's unchanging character - His faithfulness, steadfast love, and commitment to His people. These truths about God's nature remain constant regardless of our circumstances, providing an anchor for our souls when life feels overwhelming. The Psalms also address the painful reality that people will sometimes hurt us with cruel words and unfair treatment. While we want to shield our families from such experiences, we must also prepare them by teaching the calm assurance that evil is ultimately self-destructive and cannot win. David models how to maintain a steadfast heart - one that remains committed and unmovable despite changing circumstances. This steadfastness comes from anchoring our confidence in God's unchanging character rather than our fluctuating situations. The Psalms teach us to give praise not only when storms are over but while they're still raging, fostering a spirit of hope and perseverance that can transform our families and prepare them for whatever life may bring.

    31 min
  3. May 3

    Healing the Body

    In a culture that often treats the human body as disposable or purely functional, Christianity presents a radically different worldview. The Bible teaches that our bodies are not trash to be discarded but treasures that God intends to redeem completely. This perspective stands in sharp contrast to ancient Greek philosophy that viewed the material world as evil, or Gnostic beliefs that salvation meant escaping physical existence. Throughout Scripture, God demonstrates His care for human bodies through miraculous healings. In Acts 9, Peter's healing of the paralyzed Aeneas and resurrection of Tabitha reveal God's heart for physical restoration. These miracles weren't dismissals of physical suffering as unimportant, but powerful demonstrations that Jesus cares deeply about our physical well-being. When believers mourned Tabitha's death rather than celebrating her escape from the body, they showed their understanding that death isn't natural but a disruption of God's original design. Paul provides clear direction about the purpose of our bodies in Romans, teaching that when we're baptized into Christ, our entire being becomes united with Jesus. Every part of us becomes a sacred tool meant for God's glory and our neighbor's good. This understanding profoundly impacts how we live, from personal choices about sexuality and self-care to how we treat others as image bearers of God. The ultimate destiny of our bodies is resurrection and eternal transformation, where they will be completely redeemed and restored without sickness, pain, or death.

    38 min
  4. Apr 21

    Recruited - Saul

    Throughout history, people have rejected uncomfortable realities that require them to rethink their entire worldview. Just as many rejected Galileo's discovery that the Earth revolves around the sun, people today often resist the most important reality of all: the resurrection of Jesus Christ. This truth remains unchanged regardless of our acceptance, preferences, or arguments against it. Saul of Tarsus exemplifies this struggle with reality. Initially convinced that Jesus was not the Messiah, he violently persecuted Christians until encountering the risen Christ on the Damascus road. When Jesus asked why Saul was persecuting Him, it became clear that attacking the church meant attacking Christ Himself. This encounter forced Saul to spend three days in blind contemplation, rethinking every aspect of his life in light of this new reality. God's grace was evident in choosing this former persecutor as His chosen instrument to carry the gospel to the Gentiles. The resurrection should fundamentally transform how we live. It changes our approach to repentance and sin, motivates us to share the gospel with urgency, makes Scripture personal as our family story, and transforms how we treat the church as Christ's body. It should also revolutionize how we love our neighbors and worship God with genuine joy and conviction. True abundant life begins when we stop fighting against this reality and align every daily choice with the truth that Jesus Christ is alive and ruling over heaven and earth.

    36 min
  5. Jan 11

    A Gathered People

    Pentecost represents far more than a miraculous moment in church history - it's the breakthrough of God's eternal kingdom into our present world. Like experiencing technology from the future today, Pentecost allowed God's people to participate in what will be while living in what is. This transforms us from passive spectators waiting for heaven into active participants in God's kingdom work happening right now.The Old Testament prophets painted a vivid picture of God's ultimate plan: gathering His scattered people from across the earth and including people from every nation. Isaiah, Jeremiah, and Ezekiel all spoke of this great gathering, and Pentecost marked its beginning. When the apostles spoke in languages they'd never learned to devout people from every nation under heaven, it wasn't just miraculous - it was the reversal of Babel's curse and the start of God's global gathering.Today, something even more remarkable is happening. Across the globe, God's mighty works are being proclaimed in every language - Mandarin, Hindi, Spanish, Arabic, and countless others. We are part of a global, multi-ethnic, multinational, multilingual family that began gathering at Pentecost. When we proclaim God's mighty works because we're saved by Jesus and filled with His Spirit, we're participating in the future kingdom that has become present reality. The choice remains the same as it was then: we can either marvel at what God is doing and participate, or mock and explain it away. Salvation and participation belong to those who choose to marvel.

    31 min

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About

Welcome to Sunday Sermons – your midweek connection to what matters most. Each episode features the sermon from our Sunday gathering at Ashland City Church of Christ, offering you a chance to catch up, reflect deeper, or share the message with someone who needs it. We know life gets busy. Whether you were chasing toddlers during the sermon, out of town, or just want to listen again without the distractions, this podcast is for you. Expect biblical teaching, honest reflection, and practical encouragement—always rooted in Scripture, always pointing to Jesus. No pews, no pressure—just real messages for real life, delivered straight to your headphones. New episodes drop every week.