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Bear Creek Community Church

Podcast von Bear Creek Community Church

Englisch

Geschichte & Religion

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Bear Creek Community Church in Lavon, Texas exists to help people experience a full and meaningful life through a personal relationship with Jesus Christ. This podcast is primarily the weekly Sunday teaching from worship gatherings. https://www.bc3.church/

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Episode Unstoppable Church 24 | Jesus is Better | Acts 19 Cover

Unstoppable Church 24 | Jesus is Better | Acts 19

Pastor David Watson opens with a simple but universal observation — everybody wants better. Better health, better finances, better marriages, better relationships with God. Using that as his launching pad, he dives into Acts 19 and three stories Luke records about the city of Ephesus, all of which carry the same theme: Jesus is better. Whether it's the twelve disciples who had been baptized into John's baptism but never encountered the Holy Spirit, the seven sons of Sceva who tried to borrow the name of Jesus without knowing Him, or the silversmith Demetrius rallying an entire city into two hours of confused shouting over a goddess that no longer exists — Luke's message is clear. Every substitute falls short. Every cultural noise eventually fades. But Jesus never does. Pastor David ties it all together with a single sermon-in-a-sentence: when you live for a different world, you'll live better in this one. Pointing to Matthew 6:33, where Jesus says, "Seek first the kingdom of God and his righteousness," and echoing Paul's words in Romans 12, he calls the church to genuine transformation — not religious performance, not cultural conformity, but a real and living relationship with Jesus. His closing challenge is both personal and missional: transforming a city starts with a transformed you. Learn more about Bear Creek Community Church in Lavon, TX. https://www.bc3.church/

18. Mai 2026 - 49 min
Episode Unstoppable Church 23 | What Are You Looking For? | Acts 17:16-34 Cover

Unstoppable Church 23 | What Are You Looking For? | Acts 17:16-34

We've all had that moment. It's late. You're standing in front of an open refrigerator, staring into the cold light, not really hungry, not really sure what you want. You're just looking. Hoping something in there will tell you what you need. That moment is a picture of something much deeper. We are all searching for something that brings meaning to our life and rest to our soul. We try the same places. The right job. The right relationship. The right house filled with the right stuff. We run the formula and wait for the meaning and rest to show up. It never quite does. King Solomon was the richest and wisest man who ever lived. He spent his life chasing everything the world said would satisfy. Parties. Pleasure. Career. Retirement on a level none of us can imagine. At the end of all of it he wrote: "Meaningless, meaningless. All is meaningless." His conclusion was simple. The answer to our search is not found in something. It's found in someone. In this message from Acts 17:16-34, Pastor David Watson walks through Paul's sermon at the Areopagus in Athens. Paul arrives in a city that knows how to be devoted. Two of the most sophisticated philosophical schools in history, the Epicureans and the Stoics, are doing their best to answer the deepest questions of human existence. What is the meaning of life? What happens when we die? Neither school had an answer for that last question. Paul did. Among the altars of Athens, Paul finds one with a striking inscription: "To the Unknown God." The Greek word is agnostos, unknowable, the direct root of our modern word agnostic. The fastest-growing religious category in America today is exactly this, people who believe there may be a God but say he cannot be personally known. Athens was already living this 2,000 years ago. Paul walks up to that altar and says: the God you have been worshiping as unknown, I know him. And you can too. His sermon does not lead with judgment. It leads with credit. He quotes their own poets, enters their world, and reshapes it from the inside. He lands on two declarations: Jesus gives eternal life, and Jesus can be known. Not as a concept or a religion, but personally, fully known. Thomas Aquinas wrote in 1265, "We all desire God, but we will all accept substitutes." Career. Family. Materialism. Self. These are not bad things. They become substitutes when we put them on the throne and expect them to deliver what only God can. Jesus's invitation from Matthew 11 is simple. Come to me, all who are weary and heavy laden. Not come when you have it figured out. Just come. Bring the questions. His burden is easy and his yoke is light. Acts 17:16-34. Part of the Unstoppable Church series at Bear Creek Community Church, Lavon, Texas. Sundays at 10:30 AM. bc3.church.

19. Apr. 2026 - 54 min
Episode Unstoppable Church 22 | Sing While You Suffer | Acts 16 Cover

Unstoppable Church 22 | Sing While You Suffer | Acts 16

What would you do if everything went wrong at once? Not just inconvenient — genuinely, catastrophically wrong. Beaten in public. Thrown into the deepest cell of a Roman prison. Feet locked in stocks designed to cause pain on top of an already brutal flogging. No trial. No recourse. No idea what tomorrow holds. That is exactly where Paul and Silas find themselves in Acts 16. And what they do next is one of the most unexpected moments in the entire New Testament. About midnight, they prayed and sang hymns to God. And the other prisoners listened. This message is built around Acts 16:25 — and the case that it contains the greatest miracle in the whole chapter. Not the earthquake. Not the chains falling off or the doors flying open. The miracle is what Paul and Silas were doing before any of that, and what their response unleashed. In Philippi, Paul frees a slave girl from a demonic spirit. Her owners, furious at losing their income, drag Paul and Silas before the magistrates. The crowd turns. They are publicly flogged — brutal, humiliating, and as it turns out illegal, since they were Roman citizens — then thrown into the innermost cell with their feet locked in stocks. And then midnight comes. And they sing. The Greek word translated "singing hymns" is hymneo — the same word used for what Jesus and the disciples sang at the Last Supper before Gethsemane. Paul and Silas were almost certainly singing the Hallel Psalms, memorized by every faithful Jew. Picture them chanting Psalm 118 — "I will not die but live and declare the works of the Lord" — backs bleeding, feet in stocks, pitch dark. Not writing new theology. Recalling old promises. The other prisoners were not passively overhearing them. The Greek word used here means eager, riveted attention — leaning in. These walls had heard plenty of curses and weeping. They had never heard the praise of God. And Paul and Silas had no idea anyone was listening. They were not performing. They were just being faithful in the dark. God was already using it. Here is the theological core of this message: God's glory shows up most clearly against the darkest backdrop. Darkness is not the absence of God's power — it is the condition that makes his power most visible. The praise of Paul and Silas in that dungeon was a declaration that God is still God even here. Every prisoner in earshot had a front-row seat. Then God responded. Earthquake. Every door opened. Every chain loosened. The jailer, about to take his own life in terror, fell before Paul and Silas and asked the most important question of his life: "Sirs, what must I do to be saved?" His entire household came to faith that night. The church at Philippi was born — the church Paul would later call his joy and crown. The miracle did not open the door for the gospel. The worship did. The miracle confirmed it. Suffering offered to God is never wasted. Sometimes your pain becomes your platform. Sometimes your suffering is the loudest sermon you will ever preach — without saying a single word. Because the other prisoners are always listening. The people in your life who haven't yet decided what they believe about Jesus are watching you navigate your hard things. The unspoken question they are all asking: is your faith real when it costs you something? This message closes with two concrete action steps for building predictable faith — the kind that holds when the ground shakes: memorizing God's promises before the hard times come, and writing your own midnight song. Part of the Unstoppable Church series at Bear Creek Community Church in Lavon, Texas. New episodes every week. Find us at bc3.church [https://www.bc3.church/].

29. März 2026 - 37 min
Episode Unstoppable Church 21 | How the Early Church Handled Conflict (And What We Can Learn) | Acts 15 Cover

Unstoppable Church 21 | How the Early Church Handled Conflict (And What We Can Learn) | Acts 15

Conflict is unavoidable. Whether it's at home, at work, or even inside the church - you're either coming out of a conflict, going into one, or preparing for one. But here's the truth that changes everything: conflict is not the problem. Your response to it is. In this episode, Pastor David walks through Acts 15 and the Jerusalem Council - one of the earliest and most significant conflicts in church history - to uncover five biblical principles for handling conflict the way the early church did. From expecting conflict to infiltrating it with wisdom, these aren't just principles for the church. They're principles for your marriage, your friendships, your workplace, and your family. Because Jesus didn't call us to be peacekeepers. He called us to be peacemakers. In this episode: * Why conflict is guaranteed - and why that's okay * The difference between a peacekeeper and a peacemaker * 5 steps the early church used to resolve conflict * Why the church has 45,000 denominations (and what that tells us about conflict avoidance) * The one word the church has misrepresented for too long Part of our Unstoppable Church series through the Book of Acts at Bear Creek Community Church (BC3) in Lavon, Texas.

15. März 2026 - 32 min
Episode Unstoppable Church 20 | The Only Object of Our Worship | Acts 14:8-20 Cover

Unstoppable Church 20 | The Only Object of Our Worship | Acts 14:8-20

What do a Canadian Bible scholar, a Hollywood actor, and a first-century mob in a small Roman colony city have in common? They all point to the same ancient, deeply human problem: we are hardwired to put a face on the things we worship. Bible scholar Wesley Huff noticed it happening in his own life after watching The Chosen and gave it a name: The Jonathan Roumie Effect. After watching Roumie portray Jesus so many times, it was the actor's face Huff saw when reading his Bible. It sounds harmless — until you realize what's quietly happening. When we put a human face on something divine, we risk turning that person into a surrogate for the God we should be worshiping. This isn't just a problem for TV viewers. It's a problem that has devastated some of the most influential churches in America. This is an old problem in modern clothes. The Israelites begged God for a king because they needed a face on their faith. The church in Corinth was fracturing over "I follow Paul" versus "I follow Apollos." And in Acts 14, a pagan crowd in a city called Lystra watched Paul heal a man who had never walked a day in his life — and immediately declared that the gods had come down in human form. They showed up at the city gate with bulls and flower wreaths, ready to offer sacrifice to Paul and Barnabas. What happened next is one of the most instructive moments in the entire book of Acts. Paul and Barnabas tore their robes — the Jewish gesture of absolute horror at blasphemy — and ran straight into the crowd shouting: "We are people also, just like you." Then they pointed every eye to the living God who made heaven, earth, sea, and everything in them. And then the gut punch: the same crowd that minutes earlier wanted to crown Paul as a god stoned him, dragged him outside the city walls, and left him for dead. Theologians have debated for centuries whether Paul actually died in that moment. What we know is this: the man the crowd was about to worship as a god, they now assumed was a corpse in the dirt. One moment, Zeus. The next, a body at the gate. That is the celebrity lifecycle in two verses. Fame is fickle. Purpose is durable. Paul got up, walked back into the city, and the next day left for Derbe — where he preached the gospel again. Then he turned around and revisited every city that had persecuted him, strengthening churches and appointing leaders. The mission never stopped. Because the mission was never about Paul. Drawing on Will Mancini's framework from Future Church, Pastor Bart identifies the four things people most commonly attach themselves to in a local church — place, programs, people, and personality — and challenges the BC3 community to attach themselves to something none of those four things can threaten: the mission to help people find life with Jesus. He closes with a personal challenge rooted in his own painful experience of planting a church, watching people attach to him rather than the mission, and watching the church dissolve after he left. His question for every person in the room is uncomfortable and specific: think about the churches you've loved most. What made you love them — the place, the people, the programs, the pastor? Are you hoping Bear Creek will give you the same thing? Because if the methods matter more than the mission, you'll eventually end up back on Google searching "churches near me." An Unstoppable Church has only one celebrity. His name is Jesus. Bear Creek Community Church (www.BC3.church) is a church plant launching in Lavon, Texas in September 2026. The Unstoppable Church series walks through the book of Acts, exploring how the first-century Jesus movement fuels a 21st-century church on mission in southeast Collin County.

1. März 2026 - 45 min
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