Scriptured

KJD

We’re so glad you’ve chosen to join us today. No matter where you are in the world, you’re part of a community that’s here to worship, grow, and connect together. Whether you’re new to faith, exploring, or a longtime believer, this is a place where you belong. Get ready for uplifting music, inspiring messages, and opportunities to engage with others through prayer and fellowship. Our mission is to make a difference in lives everywhere by sharing the love, hope, and grace of Jesus Christ. Thank you for being here—let’s dive in and experience this moment of worship together!

  1. The Eve Gene

    10/20/2025

    The Eve Gene

    Every age has its forbidden fruit.Once it hung from a tree.Now it hides in a Petri dish. And just like before, it isn’t the fruit that destroys us — it’s what we believe it promises. Dr. Miriam Cole never set out to tempt the world.She only wanted to heal it. After years of research in the gleaming halls of Helixion Laboratories, she discovered something the human race had chased since Eden: a genetic sequence that could repair the body’s cellular decay — reversing aging, disease, even death itself. She called it The Eve Gene. At first, it was wonder.The code of creation itself.Proof that God had written eternity into the double helix of humanity. But the same question that once echoed in a garden whispered through her lab that night:“Yea, hath God said…?” What if the forbidden wasn’t forbidden after all?What if immortality could be manufactured instead of bestowed? Miriam’s discovery made her famous overnight — the “Mother of Immortality,” the scientist who might cure death itself.Investors flooded in. Governments offered grants. Her CEO, Ethan Voss, saw not a miracle but a market.He told her, “This gene doesn’t just heal, Miriam. It rewrites destiny.” And she believed him — for a while. Because when ambition dresses itself as compassion, it doesn’t look like pride. It looks like progress. But every miracle that forgets its Maker becomes a monster in disguise. When the first human trial began, Miriam prayed it would be healing.Instead, it was horror.The patient who once smiled in gratitude screamed in agony as her own cells turned against her — multiplying beyond control.In minutes, the promise of life became the proof of judgment. The Eve Gene hadn’t conquered death.It had invited the curse back in. And just like that — the world that hailed Miriam as savior now called her sinner. The rest of the story unfolds the way all human stories do — through exile, grace, and return. Disgraced and alone, Miriam retreats from the world she tried to fix.Her company collapses, her career ends, and she learns the hardest truth of all:It isn’t that humanity can’t create life — it’s that we can’t sustain it without the One who breathed it in. “For dust thou art, and unto dust shalt thou return.”— Genesis chapter 3 verse 19 But in her fall, Miriam rediscovers the God she’d ignored.In losing control, she finds peace.And in surrendering her discovery, she discovers grace. Her story reminds us that the fall wasn’t the end of Eden — it was the beginning of redemption.The gate that closed in Genesis opened again at the Cross. So now, when science tries to build a new garden without God, this story stands as a warning wrapped in mercy:Man was never cursed for learning — only for forgetting who gave him the mind to learn. The Eve Gene is a story about the modern garden — sleek, scientific, and digital — where the serpent speaks in research proposals and the fruit glows on a monitor.It’s about a woman who thought she found the secret to immortality and instead rediscovered the truth of creation:We were never meant to live forever apart from the Creator who made us. It’s a story about temptation and consequence, about exile and forgiveness — and about the kind of grace that waits on the other side of knowledge. Because the more we learn about life, the clearer it becomes that only one Hand ever made it breathe. This is The Eve Gene —where science reaches for heaven,and God still whispers,“You may learn everything… except how to be Me.”

    36 min
  2. The Final Draft

    10/20/2025

    The Final Draft

    Every believer faces a moment when the pen trembles in God’s hand — when the Author of your life writes a line you don’t understand. For David Colson, that line came at the height of his writing career. He’d spent two decades carving out a name in the crowded world of Christian fiction — the kind of novelist whose books filled church libraries, whose stories healed quiet wounds. His latest manuscript, The Prodigal Heart, was different. Raw. Redemptive. The kind of story you write once in a lifetime — the kind that leaves blood on the page. And the moment he finished it, the world came knocking. A major publishing house in New York wanted the rights. The contract was bigger than anything he’d ever imagined.But buried in the fine print was a single clause that changed everything: Remove the name of Jesus Christ from the ending. They called it “minor editing.”He called it a test. That’s when David realized he wasn’t standing in an office tower — he was standing on Mount Moriah. The choice seemed simple on paper: accept the deal, change a few lines, and secure the future for his family.But in his heart, the decision felt eternal. Because every dreamer eventually meets their Abraham moment — when God asks you to place your Isaac on the altar.For Abraham, it was his son.For David, it was his success. He loved writing.He loved the craft, the readers, the way words could heal the broken.But he loved the Truth more. The publishing house offered him everything the world celebrates — fame, comfort, recognition — if only he’d give God a smaller role in his own story. That night, sitting in the stillness of his Tennessee farmhouse, David stared at the manuscript lying open on his desk and whispered the same prayer Abraham must have prayed: “Lord, please don’t make me let go of what You gave me.” But Heaven was silent. And silence is often where obedience begins. For the next week, David wrestled.He paced, prayed, and reasoned with God.He thought about the bills stacked on the counter. He thought about his wife, Rachel, who’d sacrificed years of stability for his calling.He thought about how much easier life would be if he just said yes. But faith isn’t tested by comfort — it’s revealed by conflict. “By faith Abraham, when he was tried, offered up Isaac: and he that had received the promises offered up his only begotten son.”— Hebrews chapter 11 verse 17 So David did what every man of faith must eventually do — he drove away from everything familiar, searching for his own mountain. He rented a small cabin by a quiet lake in the Smokies. No Wi-Fi, no deadlines, no distractions. Just him, his Bible, and the blinking cursor of decision. He stared at the final page for hours, knowing one keystroke would decide the fate of both the book and the man. And just when obedience seemed too heavy to bear, God sent a ram — not through thunder, but through a letter from a dying reader whose life had been changed by his previous book. Her words were simple:“Don’t stop planting seeds.” And suddenly, David knew. He couldn’t take Christ out of his story — because Christ was the story. He sent the unedited manuscript back with a note: “Final Draft — As Written.” They rejected it.God accepted it.And that’s when the real story began. The Final Draft is a modern retelling of Abraham’s test — a story about surrendering what you love most, trusting the unseen hand that holds the pen, and discovering that God never asked for the sacrifice — only the surrender. It’s about how obedience still costs something, but disobedience costs far more. It’s about a man who learned that you can’t edit eternity — and that Heaven never rejects what’s written in obedience. So if you’ve ever faced a decision that divided your dream from your devotion…If you’ve ever been tempted to rewrite the truth to make life easier…This story is your reminder that the Author never forgets His own plot twist:He always provides. This is The Final Draft.

    33 min
  3. The Startup

    10/20/2025

    The Startup

    Every dream starts with a spark — but sometimes, before God lets it shine, He buries it in the dark. That’s what happened to Eli Matthews, the youngest of three brothers who inherited their father’s construction business in Nashville, Tennessee.While his brothers talked contracts and concrete, Eli dreamed of connection — a way to bring small-town builders, freelancers, and suppliers together through one digital network. He called it ConnectUs. It wasn’t about getting rich. It was about making work feel human again — giving honest people a place to find each other.But where Eli saw faith, his brothers saw foolishness.And where he saw purpose, they saw threat. Because every dreamer has a Joseph moment — that instant when the people closest to you stop clapping and start whispering. At first, Eli didn’t notice. He was too busy believing. He built prototypes, pitched investors, and prayed over every line of code. He believed what his father once told him: “If it serves others, God will bless it.” And He did — at first. The app took off. Local companies joined. Investors listened.But then came the meeting that changed everything. While Eli prepared his pitch for expansion, his brothers were preparing a vote to remove him. They sold his shares, locked him out of the system, and claimed his dream as their own. It was a clean betrayal, corporate-style — no shouting, no violence, just silence and signatures.The same way Joseph’s brothers didn’t kill him — they just sold him and pretended it was mercy. “And Joseph’s brethren stripped him out of his coat of many colours that was on him; and they took him, and cast him into a pit.”— Genesis chapter 37 verses 23 and 24 For Eli, that pit was digital.One day he was the visionary founder of a promising tech company.The next day, he was nobody — his login deleted, his title erased, his reputation questioned. But while his brothers built their empire, Eli built something else: endurance.He started over from scratch — coding for churches, nonprofits, and anyone who needed help. His bank account stayed empty, but his faith started filling back up. He remembered his father’s framed verse — the one that hung over the old workshop table: “Commit thy works unto the Lord, and thy thoughts shall be established.”— Proverbs chapter 16 verse 3 So that’s what he did.He committed.Not to revenge, but to rebuilding.Not to success, but to service. Years passed, and the same investor who once watched him fall reached out again. She’d been following his quiet work — small, steady, faithful. She called it BridgeLink, and she wanted in. Soon, Eli found himself leading a new company — one built not on ambition, but on grace.And in a twist only heaven could script, his first major partnership request came from ConnectUs — the very company that had betrayed him. “But as for you, ye thought evil against me; but God meant it unto good.”— Genesis chapter 50 verse 20 Like Joseph standing before the brothers who sold him, Eli had a choice — revenge or redemption.He chose mercy.And in doing so, he didn’t just save their business.He saved their family. Because that’s how God writes — He turns betrayal into blueprint, pain into platform, and brothers into believers again. The Startup Son isn’t a story about business. It’s a story about the way God uses broken dreams to build better ones.It’s about faith that doesn’t quit when the lights go out, grace that outlives envy, and a Savior who still turns pits into pulpits. So if you’ve ever been betrayed by your own blood, or watched someone steal the dream you prayed for — this story is for you.Because God still means it for good.Even when it doesn’t feel like it.Even when your own brothers walk away. This is The Startup.A modern retelling of Joseph’s journey — set in Nashville boardrooms instead of Egyptian prisons — but ruled by the same Author, the same grace, and the same God who never stops redeeming His dreamers.

    42 min
  4. The Man at Mile Marker 9

    10/20/2025

    The Man at Mile Marker 9

    Some roads never make the map.They wind through forgotten fields, ghost towns, and the quiet corners of a man’s soul.You won’t find mile markers for the heart — but sometimes, if you’re lucky, you’ll find grace standing beside one. That’s where this story begins. Ray Mercer has been behind the wheel most of his life — not because he loves the road, but because he can’t bear to stop. Once, he was a husband, a father, and a man who sang hymns in church pews on Sunday mornings. Now he’s just another trucker chasing the dotted white line through endless miles of regret. Twelve years ago, Ray closed his eyes for one second too long on a late-night drive to Colorado. When he opened them again, his world was gone — his seven-year-old son, Caleb, lost forever. His marriage didn’t survive the silence that followed, and neither did his faith. He’s been running ever since — running from God, from memory, from himself. Tonight, somewhere between Amarillo and Tulsa, the road catches up. The storm is rolling in — that kind of black-sky thunder that hums like judgment. The truck rattles, the coffee’s gone cold, and the radio’s been dead for months. Just before the sign for Mile Marker 9, Ray sees him: a man walking calmly on the shoulder, coat flapping in the wind, not hitchhiking, not lost — just there. Against every instinct a long-haul driver learns, Ray pulls over.He rolls down the window and asks, “You alright out here?” The man smiles, rain glistening on his face.“Just trying to get home,” he says. “Where’s home?” “Farther than I can walk, but closer than you think.” He calls himself Daniel Carter. Carries no bag, no phone — only a small leather Bible worn thin from years of use. He asks for a ride “as far as grace will take me.” Ray doesn’t know it yet, but that line will follow him for the rest of his life. As the truck rolls through the storm, Daniel speaks little, listens much, and somehow knows more about Ray than any stranger should. When he quietly mentions Ray’s name — a name he was never told — the air inside the cab changes. It’s as if time, grief, and heaven have all stopped to listen. By dawn, the man is gone.Only the Bible remains on the seat, open to a verse underlined long ago: “I will never leave thee, nor forsake thee.” — Hebrews chapter 13 verse 5 It bears one name on the inside cover — Daniel Carter. The same name carved on a tombstone near a small white church not far from that same highway. When Ray follows the trail back to that church, he meets the pastor — Luke Carter — who tells him the truth: Daniel was his father, a traveling preacher who died on that road twenty years ago. A man known for stopping lost souls who looked like they needed a map back to God. Ray realizes then what every listener of this story eventually will:Sometimes, grace doesn’t come in a miracle.Sometimes, it comes in a conversation. The Man at Mile Marker 9 isn’t a ghost story. It’s a redemption story — the kind that rides in the passenger seat when you think you’re driving alone.It’s about a weary man who finally learns that God doesn’t abandon His people on the shoulder of the highway. He walks beside them — calm, patient, and ready to remind them they were never lost, just waiting to be found. So if you’ve ever driven through a dark season you thought would never end —if you’ve ever carried guilt so heavy it drowned out the sound of hope —if you’ve ever wondered whether heaven still knows your name —then you’ll recognize this road. And maybe, just maybe, you’ll hear the same quiet voice whisper what Ray Mercer finally heard somewhere past dawn: You’re almost home. This is The Man at Mile Marker 9 — a story about guilt, forgiveness, and the grace that never stops walking beside you.

    38 min
  5. The Long Road Home

    10/20/2025

    The Long Road Home

    Some roads are paved with asphalt. Others with regret.And then there are the ones that wind through the broken parts of your soul — the long, quiet highways that lead you somewhere you never meant to go, and somehow, exactly where you were meant to be. That’s where this story begins. Not in a church pew. Not under bright lights or with an audience cheering your name.It begins under a starless Tennessee sky, with a man who’s got more miles behind him than ahead — and a truck that’s about to give out before he does. His name is Jake Lawson.Once upon a time, people paid good money to hear him sing about heartbreak, whiskey, and the kind of love that never quite works out. His voice filled bars, stadiums, and radio stations from Nashville to New Orleans.But fame’s a fickle friend — and grief is an anchor. These days, Jake’s just a shadow of the man who used to wear cowboy boots on magazine covers. His songs have run dry, his marriage is gone, and the daughter he wrote lullabies for… she’s long since gone home to heaven. Some nights, the silence hurts worse than the hangovers. He tells himself he doesn’t believe anymore — not in love, not in luck, not in God.But the truth is, he does believe.He just doesn’t want to. It’s late when the truck dies — somewhere between Nashville and nowhere. The engine coughs twice, gives up, and leaves Jake stranded on a backroad with nothing but a guitar case, a flask, and a sky that looks like judgment. He kicks the tire, curses the heavens, and mutters, “Figures. You always had a sense of humor.”No answer, of course. Just the soft rumble of thunder rolling through the hills like an old memory coming back to haunt him. That’s when he sees it — a porch light flickering faintly in the distance.A farmhouse. A single warm glow in a world that’s gone cold. And because he’s got nowhere else to go, Jake starts walking. That light belongs to Eli Turner, a widowed farmer with hands like worn leather and eyes that still carry kindness in them. He lives alone, works his land, and listens for God the way most folks listen for the weather — not to predict it, just to be ready when it changes. Eli doesn’t know who Jake Lawson used to be, and he doesn’t care.He just knows a man lost on a dark road when he sees one. Inside that little farmhouse — over coffee, cornbread, and a storm that rattles the windows — two men from different worlds share one quiet truth:that brokenness isn’t the end of the road. Sometimes it’s the beginning. Jake doesn’t know it yet, but that night will change everything.He’ll pick up a guitar again for the first time in years.He’ll write a song that doesn’t come from pain, but from peace.And by the time the sun rises, the road that brought him low will start leading him home. You see, grace doesn’t always arrive dressed like a miracle.Sometimes it looks like a flat tire, a thunderstorm, or a stranger who opens the door just when you’ve stopped knocking. In this story, you’ll find no angels with wings, no sermons, no stage lights — just two men, one broken heart, and a God who still works the night shift on backroads nobody bothers to travel. So, if you’ve ever felt like you’ve taken too many wrong turns…If you’ve ever wondered whether your story could still turn around…If you’ve ever found yourself stranded between who you were and who you want to be — Then you might just find yourself in Jake Lawson’s shoes tonight. Because this story isn’t just about a man finding his way back to God.It’s about how God never stopped walking beside him — even when Jake left the map behind. This is The Long Road Home.A story about mercy on the miles, grace in the gravel, and a redemption that drives slow but never stops coming.

    33 min
  6. Tell Them He was With Me

    10/19/2025

    Tell Them He was With Me

    There’s a certain kind of silence that only lives after midnight.It’s not the kind that soothes you — it’s the kind that listens back. That’s where our story begins… inside a dim dispatch room at the edge of a sleeping town, where one woman spends her nights waiting for voices that never call just to say, “I’m okay.” Her name is Marianne Holt — veteran 911 dispatcher, widow, and keeper of other people’s emergencies. Her voice has steadied a thousand storms, though she hasn’t found peace in her own. Faith once lived in her heart like a small lamp, but grief snuffed it out long ago. She used to pray. Used to sing. Used to believe that when people called out for help, Someone greater was listening. But life — and loss — has a way of turning prayers into background noise. And then came one call… the one that would break through all the static. A young woman’s trembling voice comes over the line. Her car has gone off the road. The night is freezing. The lights are fading. And yet — instead of panic — the girl begins to pray. Not for rescue. Not for survival. But for peace. It’s a prayer so real, so raw, so filled with unshakable calm that it reaches through the wires, past the headset, and into the soul of the woman who hears it.Before the line goes silent, the girl leaves seven words that will change everything: “Tell them He was with me.” In the hours and days that follow, Marianne will find herself haunted by that voice — not by fear, but by faith. She’ll go to the crash site, attend the funeral, and discover that the prayer she overheard wasn’t just meant for the dying… it was meant for the living. And when her next emergency call comes weeks later, Marianne won’t just be a dispatcher anymore. She’ll be something far greater — a voice of faith, guiding others not only toward help, but toward hope. Tonight’s story isn’t about the tragedy that took a life — it’s about the whisper that saved another.It’s about a God who still answers, even through the static.It’s about a lost soul who rediscovers grace in the glow of a headset light. This is the story of what happens when heaven speaks on the line…and one heart finally learns to listen. This is “Tell Them He Was With Me.”

    37 min

About

We’re so glad you’ve chosen to join us today. No matter where you are in the world, you’re part of a community that’s here to worship, grow, and connect together. Whether you’re new to faith, exploring, or a longtime believer, this is a place where you belong. Get ready for uplifting music, inspiring messages, and opportunities to engage with others through prayer and fellowship. Our mission is to make a difference in lives everywhere by sharing the love, hope, and grace of Jesus Christ. Thank you for being here—let’s dive in and experience this moment of worship together!