Billede af showet GC2 Church

GC2 Church

Podcast af GC2 Church

engelsk

Historie & religion

Begrænset tilbud

2 måneder kun 19 kr.

Derefter 99 kr. / månedOpsig når som helst.

  • 20 lydbogstimer pr. måned
  • Podcasts kun på Podimo
  • Gratis podcasts
Kom i gang

Læs mere GC2 Church

These podcasts are an extension of the teaching ministry of GC2 Church, located in San Diego, CA. Our name comes from the essence of Jesus' ministry: fulfilling the Great Commission while living the Great Commandment. GC2 Church offers gospel-centered, biblical teaching that aims to inspire and equip disciples to go make disciples. For more information, please visit: www.gc2church.org.

Alle episoder

41 episoder

episode Discipleship: A Community Project | Acts 2:42–47, 1 Cor. 1:9, 1 John 1:6–9 cover

Discipleship: A Community Project | Acts 2:42–47, 1 Cor. 1:9, 1 John 1:6–9

For a full bible study: click HERE [https://gc2church.org/messages/discipleship-a-community-project-passages/]. Sermon Big Idea: The community that costs you the most transforms you the most. Sermon Overview: When we read the New Testament carefully, one thing becomes impossible to miss: there is no category for a disciple without a community. From the very first days of the church in Jerusalem, following Jesus was never designed to be a private, personal journey. The early believers didn't go home after Pentecost to pursue their individual quiet times — they stayed together, learned together, ate together, and prayed together. That shared life had a name: koinōnia. Not the watered-down "fellowship" of a church potluck, but something far richer — a binding, costly, mutual participation in shared life. This word, taken from ancient Roman-Greek life, which dealt with business partnerships in which both partners share the assets, the risk, and the outcome equally, koinōnia means you are genuinely all in. Pastor Jason’s big idea is simply this: the community that costs you the most transforms you the most. The four rhythms of Acts 2:42 — the teaching, fellowship, shared meals, and prayer — were not comfortable spiritual habits for the early church. Each one carried a genuine cost. Identifying with a crucified criminal meant excommunication from the synagogue, family rupture, and exclusion from the marketplace. Eating across class and ethnic lines put the community on Rome's radar. Selling land and sharing possessions meant betting your family's entire financial security on this group of people. These were not casual commitments — they were acts of costly togetherness. And before any of this could be horizontal, it was first vertical: as Paul reminds us in 1 Corinthians 1:9, God himself called us into partnership with his Son. The koinōnia of the church flows from the eternal fellowship of the Father, Son, and Spirit — and we have been invited into it. The reason genuine community is so hard to sustain is older than any of us. Long before we developed our sophisticated modern strategies for keeping people at arm's length, our ancestors, Adam and Eve invented the first one: fig leaves. The moment sin entered the world, shame produced hiding — and every human being born since has been refining that hiding strategy ever since. We hide behind busyness, humor, performance, and carefully managed images. We share enough to appear authentic without ever revealing anything that could actually change how people see us. Jason shows how 1 John 1:7 calls us back to the original design: walking in the light, being known as we actually are — not just as we hope to appear. The good news is that the light is not a spotlight of shame. It is the presence of a God whose blood covers everything it exposes. A poignant and powerful illustration comes from the life of Dietrich Bonhoeffer, who warned from his underground seminary in Nazi Germany, the person who loves their dream of community more than the actual community becomes its destroyer. Real koinōnia asks us to put down the wish dream and enter the community God has actually given us — broken people, awkward edges, and all. The cost of genuine Christian community is real. It will cost you vulnerability — the willingness to be seen as you actually are. It will cost you generosity — loosening your grip on the self-sufficiency that keeps you from needing anyone. And it will cost you perseverance — staying in difficult relationships when drifting away would be so much easier. But the cost is not the obstacle. The cost is the method. The community that costs you the most is the one that changes you the most — because Jesus himself proved that principle first. He did not enter our world at a safe distance. He entered fully, at the cost of everything, so that we could dare to be known. The same Lord who called twelve imperfect people around a table is calling you to the same table today. Discipleship was never meant to be a solo journey. It has always been a community project.

19. maj 2026 - 47 min
episode Galatians 6:11-18 |The Gospel and New Life cover

Galatians 6:11-18 |The Gospel and New Life

Sermon Big Idea: The cross frees us from the world and gives us a new life that extends far beyond it. Sermon Outline: * THE COUNTERFEIT LIFE (6:11-13) * THE CRUCIFIED LIFE (6:11-14) * THE NEWLY CREATED LIFE (6:15-16) * THE MARKED LIFE (6:17-18) Sermon Overview: Pastor Jason begins by identifying a universal human struggle: the instinct to boast. From childhood races to modern social media feeds, we naturally crave the approval of others by highlighting our achievements and status. This outward "boasting" is often a mask for inward insecurity and a desperate search for acceptance. However, as the Apostle Paul concludes his letter to the Galatians, he offers a radical redirection of this instinct. He suggests that the problem isn't the act of boasting itself, but rather the object of it. Instead of boasting in ourselves, we are called to boast exclusively in the cross of Jesus Christ. A primary warning in the message focuses on the danger of "counterfeit Christianity." Paul’s opponents in Galatia sought the benefits of Jesus without the sacrifice of the cross, pushing for outward rituals like circumcision to gain social standing and avoid persecution. Today, this persists in "progressive" or "filtered" movements that hollow out the gospel, treating Jesus as a mere moral example rather than a substitutionary savior. Authentic Christianity is inherently offensive to human pride because the cross tells us we cannot save ourselves; it unmasks our empty religious performance and confronts our self-sufficiency with a gift we could never earn. Paul the Apostle then explores the "crucified life," showing how the cross is a multidimensional experience with  "triple crucifixion." First is the crucifixion of Jesus for our sins; second is the crucifixion of the world’s system of values to the believer; and third is the believer’s own death to the world's influence. This isn't just a theological concept but a daily reality. To live the crucified life means being severed from the world's system of approval and reordering our ambitions. It is an ongoing process of dying to self-interest so that we might truly live for Christ, regardless of the social cost. Transitioning from death to life, the message highlights that the cross is the gateway to "new creation." Paul dismisses old religious debates, stating that neither outward rituals nor their absence matters—only being a new creation in Christ. This new life is not something we merely wait for in eternity; it has "broken into" the present age. Every act of grace, every burden carried for another, and every moment we choose Christ over worldly approval is a small "eruption" of God’s future kingdom appearing here and now. We are invited to participate in a new category of humanity defined by freedom and divine purpose. Finally, Pastor Jason concludes with the concept of the "marked life." Just as Paul bore physical scars from his devotion to Jesus, believers today bear "marks" of authenticity. These marks may not be physical wounds, but they are found in changed friendships, refused compromises, and invisible service that costs us something. These scars tell a story of belonging to Jesus that words alone cannot. The message ends as the letter began—with grace. While the crucified life is costly, it is sustained by an unending, redeeming grace that offers a life far more substantial than anything the world can provide.

4. maj 2026 - 44 min
episode Galatians 6:1-10 |The Gospel and Community cover

Galatians 6:1-10 |The Gospel and Community

Sermon Big Idea: We often look for the Spirit in the spectacular, but we must look for the Spirit in the sacrificial. Sermon Summary: Pastor Jason shows how Paul closes his letter to the Galatians not with more theological thunder but with a surprisingly tender and practical exhortation. After defending the gospel with explosive precision — grace alone, faith alone, Christ alone — he downshifts in chapter 6 and shows what the gospel actually produces in the life of a community. The sermon’s big idea anchors everything: we often look for the Spirit in the spectacular, but we must look for the Spirit in the sacrificial. Therefore, the gospel doesn't just save individuals; it binds them together into a community that goes toward the fallen rather than away from them. The message expands on the ways the Spirit is evident in the sacrificial: Restore, Bear, and Watch Yourself When a believer is overtaken by sin, Paul's call is not to manage them from a distance or shame them into compliance — it is to restore them, the way a surgeon sets a broken bone: with precision, care, and the goal of full function restored. Burden-bearing is cross-shaped love made tangible, fulfilling the very law of Christ which is the law of self-giving love. But Paul immediately adds a sober guardrail — watch yourself. The restorer is never immune. Pride, the same sin, or slow-growing contempt can corrupt the work from the inside. The serious danger of burden-bearing is self-delusion: the quiet sense that you are fundamentally different from the person you are helping. Examine Yourself, Sow Generously Paul's pivot to self-examination in verses 3–5 is not a change of subject — it is the necessary protection for everything he just said. The person who thinks they are too important to help someone is only fooling themselves. Honest self-assessment, not comparison with others, is the mark of genuine spiritual maturity. From there Paul moves to the harvest principle: whatever you sow, you will reap. Sowing to the Spirit — through restoration, generosity, faithful presence, and material provision for those who teach — produces life. Sowing to self-indulgence quietly frays the bonds of community. Don't Grow Weary — the Harvest Is Coming Paul closes with one of his most pastorally honest lines: don't grow weary in doing good. He acknowledges the fatigue is real. The beautiful, costly, Christlike work of community is slow and often invisible — but the harvest is coming, and God never wastes a seed. Goodness starts close before it reaches far: do good to everyone, and especially to those in the household of faith.   For full sermon bible study, click HERE [https://gc2church.org/messages/the-gospel-and-community/].

26. apr. 2026 - 47 min
episode Galatians 5:1-15 | The Gospel and Freedom cover

Galatians 5:1-15 | The Gospel and Freedom

Big Idea: The gospel grants believers a freedom that must be guarded, grounded, and guided.   Sermon Summary:   Pastor Jason begins by explaining how freedom is one of the most powerful words in human experience, and nothing illustrates its weight more than the Emancipation Proclamation of 1863 — a legal declaration that set enslaved people free, yet many remained in bondage simply because the announcement had not reached them. Paul writes to the Galatians with the same urgency. The freedom Christ won on Good Friday and Easter has already been declared. The chains are broken. Yet false teachers — the Judaizers — were quietly keeping believers in bondage by customizing the gospel, adding requirements to grace, and forcing people to live as if the revolutionary announcement of Christ's liberation had never happened. The big idea of the passage is clear: the gospel grants believers a freedom that must be guarded, grounded, and guided.   First, freedom must be guarded. Paul opens Galatians 5 with both a completed fact and an urgent command — Christ has set us free, therefore stand firm and do not surrender it. The Judaizers were pressuring the Galatians to embrace circumcision as a condition of belonging, but Paul warns that adding any human requirement to grace is a return to slavery. To trust in self-performance for God's approval is to trade Christ's grace for weak self-effort — and that is never a good trade. The only thing that truly counts, Paul insists, is faith expressing itself through love — not religious achievement, not tribal markers, not an unspoken checklist of spiritual performance.   Second, freedom must be grounded. Paul uses two vivid images — a runner knocked off course and yeast working invisibly through dough — to warn that false teaching rarely announces itself. It arrives subtly, through persuasive voices and plausible arguments, and once it takes hold it is very hard to undo. The best defense against deception is not cleverness but being deeply rooted in the gospel — knowing it, owning it, and refusing to let anyone quietly replace it with something that sounds similar but slowly undermines grace. The cross is an offense, and any version of the gospel that removes that offense by making human effort central has already ceased to be the gospel.   Third, freedom must be guided. The same freedom Christ won can be turned inward to feed the flesh — our natural default toward self-sufficiency, self-promotion, and self-protection — and the result is a community that bites and devours itself. Paul's radical solution is to channel freedom outward in love and service toward others. Like fire in a fireplace, freedom rightly directed warms and sustains a community; freedom turned inward burns it down. The question every believer must answer is not whether they have freedom — in Christ they do — but which direction that freedom is flowing. Outward in love and grace, or inward in selfishness and division. One warms the room. The other burns it down.

12. apr. 2026 - 42 min
episode Easter: When Empty is the Best News Ever | Luke 24:1-12 cover

Easter: When Empty is the Best News Ever | Luke 24:1-12

Sermon Big Idea: Easter isn’t about just believing Jesus came back to life—it’s believing he came to give us new life.   Sermon Summary: We all know the feeling of empty. An empty fridge. An empty bank account. An empty room where you expected people to show up. Most of the time, empty means something is missing — something you needed that just isn't there. It disappoints. It lets us down. And if we're honest, it's not just our circumstances that feel empty sometimes — it's us. Empty joy. Empty purpose. Empty hope. A quiet void on the inside that's hard to explain and even harder to fill.   But what if empty could be the best news you've ever heard? That's the surprise at the heart of the Easter story. When a group of grieving women arrived at the tomb of Jesus early Sunday morning, they expected to find a body. Instead they found something that would change the course of human history — an empty tomb. What began as a morning of deep sadness and loss suddenly became the most important moment in human history. Two angels met them with a question that stopped everything: "Why are you looking among the dead for someone who is alive?"   In this message, Pastor Jason walks through the story of the first Easter morning from Luke 24, following the journey of people just like us — people who were heartbroken, confused, and full of doubt. We meet the women who came to the tomb with heavy hearts and heavy spices. We meet the disciples who dismissed the news as nonsense. And we meet Peter, who couldn't help himself — he had to run and see for himself. Their story is an invitation for us to do the same.   Because Easter isn't just about believing Jesus came back to life, it's about believing he came to give us new life. The resurrection wasn't only something that happened to Jesus — it's something he accomplished for you. On the cross he took the death we deserved, so that through faith we could receive the life we don't deserve. That's not religion. That's grace. And it speaks directly into every fear, every failure, every shame, and every emptiness you've ever carried.   Whether you're carrying empty hope, empty purpose, or just a quiet void you haven't been able to name — this message is for you. The only tomb that matters is already empty. And because it is, you don't have to be.

7. apr. 2026 - 46 min
En fantastisk app med et enormt stort udvalg af spændende podcasts. Podimo formår virkelig at lave godt indhold, der takler de lidt mere svære emner. At der så også er lydbøger oveni til en billig pris, gør at det er blevet min favorit app.
En fantastisk app med et enormt stort udvalg af spændende podcasts. Podimo formår virkelig at lave godt indhold, der takler de lidt mere svære emner. At der så også er lydbøger oveni til en billig pris, gør at det er blevet min favorit app.
Rigtig god tjeneste med gode eksklusive podcasts og derudover et kæmpe udvalg af podcasts og lydbøger. Kan varmt anbefales, om ikke andet så udelukkende pga Dårligdommerne, Klovn podcast, Hakkedrengene og Han duo 😁 👍
Podimo er blevet uundværlig! Til lange bilture, hverdagen, rengøringen og i det hele taget, når man trænger til lidt adspredelse.

Vælg dit abonnement

Mest populære

Begrænset tilbud

Premium

20 timers lydbøger

  • Podcasts kun på Podimo

  • Ingen reklamer i podcasts fra Podimo

  • Opsig når som helst

2 måneder kun 19 kr.
Derefter 99 kr. / måned

Kom i gang

Premium Plus

100 timers lydbøger

  • Podcasts kun på Podimo

  • Ingen reklamer i podcasts fra Podimo

  • Opsig når som helst

Prøv gratis i 7 dage
Derefter 129 kr. / måned

Prøv gratis

Kun på Podimo

Populære lydbøger

Kom i gang

2 måneder kun 19 kr. Derefter 99 kr. / måned. Opsig når som helst.