Lindsay Lane East

Wait for it...Together - Stay Real

36 min · I går
episode Wait for it...Together - Stay Real cover

Beskrivelse

This powerful message from 1 Thessalonians chapter 2 challenges us to examine whether we're truly living out our faith or simply faking it. In our instant-gratification culture where everything comes quickly and easily, we've developed an unfortunate tendency to fake the Christian life rather than invest the time and effort it takes to genuinely live it. Paul's defense of his ministry reveals four critical areas where authenticity matters most. The first two—real ministry and real leadership—expose how easily we can appear bold at church while remaining cowards in our everyday lives, or how we might fake leadership by simply being bossy rather than genuinely nurturing and preparing those we lead. Paul uses beautiful imagery of both motherhood and fatherhood to illustrate authentic leadership: like a nursing mother who provides and prepares, and like a father who both pulls children in with encouragement and pushes them toward growth. The heart of this message reminds us that God has already approved us, entrusted us with the gospel, and examines our hearts—not to condemn us, but to love us unconditionally. This divine love should be the foundation that gives us confidence to stop faking and start living the authentic Christian life we're called to embrace.

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185 episoder

episode Wait for it...Together - Stay Real cover

Wait for it...Together - Stay Real

This powerful message from 1 Thessalonians chapter 2 challenges us to examine whether we're truly living out our faith or simply faking it. In our instant-gratification culture where everything comes quickly and easily, we've developed an unfortunate tendency to fake the Christian life rather than invest the time and effort it takes to genuinely live it. Paul's defense of his ministry reveals four critical areas where authenticity matters most. The first two—real ministry and real leadership—expose how easily we can appear bold at church while remaining cowards in our everyday lives, or how we might fake leadership by simply being bossy rather than genuinely nurturing and preparing those we lead. Paul uses beautiful imagery of both motherhood and fatherhood to illustrate authentic leadership: like a nursing mother who provides and prepares, and like a father who both pulls children in with encouragement and pushes them toward growth. The heart of this message reminds us that God has already approved us, entrusted us with the gospel, and examines our hearts—not to condemn us, but to love us unconditionally. This divine love should be the foundation that gives us confidence to stop faking and start living the authentic Christian life we're called to embrace.

I går36 min
episode Wait for it...Together - Stay Different cover

Wait for it...Together - Stay Different

This powerful exploration of 1 Thessalonians chapter 1 challenges us to examine what it truly means to live a transformed life while we wait for Christ's return. The central question posed is profound: What are we supposed to do while we wait for Jesus to come back? Are we just killing time, or is there a particular life God has called us to live? The message walks us through three transformative changes the gospel brings. First, it changes our identity through God's calling, His power working in us, the assurance of our salvation, and ultimately our behavior. We're reminded that faith, hope, and love aren't just words we throw around—they should produce visible work, labor, and endurance in our lives. Second, the gospel changes our perspective, helping us find joy even in persecution and suffering because we understand the eternal picture. Finally, it changes our influence, making us examples to others not for our own glory, but so the world can hear about who God is. The Thessalonian believers didn't just claim to follow Jesus—their transformed lives were so evident that their reputation spread throughout the region. This isn't about perfect people, but about people who truly encountered the power of God and were never the same. The challenge for us is clear: Are we living defeated lives, forgetting the power that resides in us, or are we tapping into the strength of the God who raised Jesus from the dead?

8. juni 202644 min
episode Luke 15 - Mike Green cover

Luke 15 - Mike Green

This powerful message takes us deep into Luke 15, where we encounter three unforgettable parables about lostness and being found. At the heart of these stories—the lost sheep, the lost coin, and the lost son—lies a stunning truth: God pursues us relentlessly. The text reveals a beautiful tension between the religious crowd who complained about Jesus welcoming sinners and the broken people who drew near to Him. We're challenged to examine our own hearts: Do we truly understand the value of people? The shepherd doesn't celebrate having 99 sheep safely in the fold; he leaves them to pursue the one that's lost. This isn't about numbers for their own sake, but about the infinite worth of each individual soul. The message confronts us with uncomfortable questions about what kills churches—criticism, infrequent attendance, refusing to volunteer, neglecting the next generation, and valuing personal preference over souls. Yet it also offers tremendous hope: when we understand that eternity is at stake, everything changes. We're reminded that over 80 percent of people come to church because a friend invites them, not through programs or advertising. The call is clear and urgent: Who is your one? Who has God placed in your life that needs to hear about His transforming love? The beauty of the gospel is that God doesn't just find us—He places us on His shoulders with compassion and carries us home.

1. juni 202632 min
episode Do You Want To Be Healed? - Kenny Blythe cover

Do You Want To Be Healed? - Kenny Blythe

This powerful message confronts us with a question that's far more challenging than it first appears: Do we actually want to be healed? Drawing from John chapter 5 and the story of the paralyzed man at the Pool of Bethesda, we're invited to examine the broken places in our lives—the anger, bitterness, insecurity, and patterns we keep running back to. The man at the pool had been paralyzed for 38 years, and when Jesus asks if he wants to be healed, it seems like an obvious answer. Yet many of us have grown so accustomed to our brokenness that we've made it part of our identity. We rationalize our dysfunction, saying 'that's just who I am.' The truth is, genuine healing requires change, effort, and the willingness to let Jesus uproot everything about our brokenness. It means surrounding ourselves with honest community and acknowledging that Jesus uses His people to heal His people. The beautiful promise is that Jesus is in the business of moving us up the scale of life—from barely surviving to truly living with peace, joy, and purpose. Healing may not be instant, but moving from a three to a three-and-a-half is still progress. The question remains: Will we let Him work in our lives, even if it takes time and effort? Because every person dies, but not every person truly lives.

25. maj 202637 min
episode Forgiveness Part 2: The Weight When We Don't cover

Forgiveness Part 2: The Weight When We Don't

This powerful message confronts one of the most challenging aspects of Christian living: extending forgiveness to those who have wronged us, even when they don't seem sorry. Drawing from Luke 17:3-4 and the crucifixion account in Luke 23, we're invited to examine a radical truth—that withholding forgiveness actually damages us more than the person who hurt us. The teaching walks us through four difficult stages of forgiveness: when someone apologizes only after we confront them, when they repeatedly hurt us, when they never apologize at all, and when they've committed the worst offenses against us. Jesus' words from the cross, 'Father, forgive them, they don't know what they're doing,' become our template for impossible forgiveness. The message reveals that our unforgiveness doesn't just isolate one relationship—it bleeds into our worship, makes us vulnerable to spiritual attack, and disrupts our communion with God. Perhaps most striking is the reframing of forgiveness not as weakness but as privilege—a chance to magnify the gospel's power and declare that something greater than our hurt exists in this world. We're challenged to become what God intends: forgiven people who are being transformed into forgiving people.

18. maj 202635 min