The Merge

The Holiness of Welcome

5 min · 26. juni 2026
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The Holiness of Welcome Matthew 10:40–42 In this episode of The Merge, Pastor Sarge reflects on Matthew 10:40–42 and the sacred calling of Christian welcome. Jesus teaches that hospitality is not simply good manners or church friendliness; it is a holy practice through which we receive Christ and bear witness to the God who has welcomed us by grace. This devotional explores the spiritual power of ordinary mercy. Jesus does not end his teaching with a grand religious display, but with something as simple as offering water to one of the little ones. In the kingdom of God, small acts of care are never small when they are offered in the spirit of Christ. Pastor Sarge also reframes biblical holy resistance as a positive, faithful, mercy-shaped practice. Holy resistance is not hostility or negativity. It is the church’s grace-filled refusal to let indifference, exclusion, hurry, fear, or dehumanization define how we see and receive one another. In Christ, welcome becomes witness, hospitality becomes discipleship, and ordinary kindness becomes holy ground. Takeaways 1. Christian welcome is more than politeness; it is participation in the mission of Christ. 2. The church practices hospitality because God has first welcomed us through grace. 3. A small act of mercy, offered in Christ’s name, can carry deep kingdom significance. 4. Biblical holy resistance is positive and constructive. It resists indifference through mercy, exclusion through welcome, and fear through love. 5. The question for today is simple but searching: Who needs a “cup of cold water” from me today? Closing Prayer Gracious God, thank you for welcoming us through Jesus Christ. Open our eyes to the people around us who need mercy, recognition, and care. Slow us down enough to notice those who are thirsty in body, mind, or spirit. Soften our hearts enough to respond with compassion. Make us a people who practice holy resistance through welcome, hospitality, and love. Teach us never to underestimate the power of a small act offered in your name. Amen.

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episode The Holiness of Welcome cover

The Holiness of Welcome

The Holiness of Welcome Matthew 10:40–42 In this episode of The Merge, Pastor Sarge reflects on Matthew 10:40–42 and the sacred calling of Christian welcome. Jesus teaches that hospitality is not simply good manners or church friendliness; it is a holy practice through which we receive Christ and bear witness to the God who has welcomed us by grace. This devotional explores the spiritual power of ordinary mercy. Jesus does not end his teaching with a grand religious display, but with something as simple as offering water to one of the little ones. In the kingdom of God, small acts of care are never small when they are offered in the spirit of Christ. Pastor Sarge also reframes biblical holy resistance as a positive, faithful, mercy-shaped practice. Holy resistance is not hostility or negativity. It is the church’s grace-filled refusal to let indifference, exclusion, hurry, fear, or dehumanization define how we see and receive one another. In Christ, welcome becomes witness, hospitality becomes discipleship, and ordinary kindness becomes holy ground. Takeaways 1. Christian welcome is more than politeness; it is participation in the mission of Christ. 2. The church practices hospitality because God has first welcomed us through grace. 3. A small act of mercy, offered in Christ’s name, can carry deep kingdom significance. 4. Biblical holy resistance is positive and constructive. It resists indifference through mercy, exclusion through welcome, and fear through love. 5. The question for today is simple but searching: Who needs a “cup of cold water” from me today? Closing Prayer Gracious God, thank you for welcoming us through Jesus Christ. Open our eyes to the people around us who need mercy, recognition, and care. Slow us down enough to notice those who are thirsty in body, mind, or spirit. Soften our hearts enough to respond with compassion. Make us a people who practice holy resistance through welcome, hospitality, and love. Teach us never to underestimate the power of a small act offered in your name. Amen.

26. juni 20265 min
episode Courage When the Gospel Cost cover

Courage When the Gospel Cost

Courage When the Gospel Costs Matthew 10:24–39 In this episode of The Merge, Pastor Sargent reflects on Matthew 10:24–39 and Jesus’ serious word to the disciples: faithful witness will sometimes cost something. Jesus does not send his followers into the world with shallow encouragement or easy promises. Instead, he tells them the truth so that fear will not become their lord. This devotional speaks into our present moment, where fear is often organized, amplified, and fed back to us through the algorithmic world. It also offers a theological challenge to white Christian nationalism, reminding us that love of country must never be lifted above love of Christ, and that the cross must never be interpreted by the flag. Drawing on Augustine’s wisdom about rightly ordered love, this episode invites listeners to examine what is forming their attention, shaping their fears, and ordering their loyalties. Christian courage is not harshness, recklessness, or the desire for conflict. It is love rightly ordered beneath the lordship of Christ. In serious times, the church is called to tell the truth with humility, love with courage, serve without fear, and keep every earthly loyalty beneath the reign of God. Takeaways Jesus prepares disciples for costly witness, not comfortable religion. Fear is real, but fear must not be allowed to govern the church’s speech, welcome, service, or imagination. The algorithmic era forms people by shaping attention, often rewarding outrage, suspicion, and reaction over prayerful discernment. White Christian nationalism is a theological disorder because it places nation, power, race, or cultural belonging where only Christ belongs. Augustine’s teaching on rightly ordered love helps us see that even good loves can become idols when they are placed above God. The cross is not a weapon of domination. It is the shape of God’s costly love, where truth and mercy meet. Christian courage is not the absence of fear. It is faithfulness under pressure, rooted in the care of the God who sees even the sparrow. Closing Prayer Lord Jesus, order our loves beneath your lordship. Free us from the fears that silence truth, shrink compassion, and divide neighbor from neighbor. Teach us to use technology without being ruled by it, to love our country without worshiping it, and to carry the cross without turning it into a weapon. Give us courage that is humble, love that is clear, and faith that remains steady when the gospel costs something. Amen.

19. juni 20266 min
episode When Compassion Becomes a Calling cover

When Compassion Becomes a Calling

When Compassion Becomes a Calling In this episode of The Merge, we reflect on Matthew 9:35—10:8, where Jesus sees the crowds and has compassion because they are “harassed and helpless, like sheep without a shepherd.” But Jesus’ compassion does not remain only a feeling. It becomes movement. It becomes mission. It becomes a calling. This devotional invites us to consider how Christ moves the church from observation to participation. The disciples are told to pray for laborers, and then Jesus sends them as laborers into the harvest. For New Thomson and for every follower of Jesus, this is a timely reminder that stability is not the end of the calling. God gives us strength, community, and compassion so that we may serve with deeper faithfulness. The harvest is not far away. It is in the children who need safe spaces, families who need food and dignity, youth who need guidance, seniors who need remembrance, and neighbors who need to know that grace is real. Key Takeaways Jesus sees people beneath the surface, especially those who are weary, wounded, and overlooked. Compassion in the way of Jesus is not passive sympathy; it becomes mission. The disciples who pray for laborers become the disciples Jesus sends. The church’s brighter future is not complacency or busyness, but shared calling. We do not enter the harvest as saviors, but as people who have already been met by grace. Closing Prayer Lord Jesus, give us eyes to see people as you see them. Guard us from complacency, indifference, and fear. Let your compassion move through us until prayer becomes participation and concern becomes calling. Show each of us our place in the harvest, and give us courage to serve with humility, mercy, and joy. Amen.

12. juni 20266 min
episode Grace at the Table, Power in the Touch cover

Grace at the Table, Power in the Touch

The Merge Drive-Time Devotional Episode Title: Grace at the Table, Power in the Touch Text: Matthew 9:9–13, 18–26 In this episode of The Merge, we reflect on Matthew 9, where Jesus calls Matthew from the tax booth, eats with tax collectors and sinners, heals a woman who has suffered for twelve years, and raises a child from death. This is a passage about mercy on the move. Jesus sees beyond labels, reaches toward hidden wounds, and enters places where others have already given up hope. In an algorithmic age that often reduces people to profiles, patterns, mistakes, and categories, Jesus teaches us a different way to see. At the tax booth, he sees a disciple. In the crowd, he sees a daughter. In the house of grief, he sees a child who can rise. Grace has a table, mercy has hands, and resurrection hope still interrupts despair. Takeaways 1. Jesus sees beyond labels. Matthew was more than a tax collector, and we are more than the categories others place on us. 2. Mercy is not weakness. Mercy is the healing power of God moving toward wounded, rejected, and weary people. 3. Grace creates belonging. The woman reached for healing, but Jesus gave her dignity and called her “daughter.” 4. Hope still has power. Even when the crowd laughs at the possibility of life, Jesus enters the house and takes the child by the hand. 5. The church is called to embody mercy. Before we classify people, we are called to behold them. Before we exclude, we remember that we are at the table only by grace. Closing Prayer Lord Jesus, thank you for seeing us beneath every label, wound, and failure. Thank you for calling us before we had everything together, for turning toward our hidden pain, and for entering the places where hope feels lost. Teach us to see others with your mercy. Make our tables wider, our hands gentler, and our faith stronger. Where shame has silenced us, speak belonging. Where grief has settled in, bring life again. Amen.

5. juni 20265 min
episode CROWNED FOR CARE cover

CROWNED FOR CARE

In this Trinity Sunday episode of The Merge, we reflect on Psalm 8 and the beautiful truth that human beings are crowned by God not for domination, but for care. In a world that often confuses power with control, Psalm 8 calls us back to wonder, humility, and faithful stewardship. This devotional invites listeners to begin with the majesty of God, remember their God-given dignity, and ask how they are being called to care for what has been placed in their hands today. What to Listen For Listen for how Psalm 8 moves from awe to vocation, and how Trinity Sunday deepens that call by reminding us that the God we worship is Father, Son, and Holy Spirit—a God whose life is communion, love, and shared presence. This episode offers a gentle but important reminder: the crown God gives is not permission to control, but a calling to serve. Key Takeaways * True human dignity begins with the majesty of God. * We are small in the universe, but never forgotten by God. * Being crowned with glory and honor means being entrusted with responsibility. * Psalm 8 calls us to stewardship, not domination. * Small acts of care are real acts of discipleship. * The triune God forms us for humble, faithful, everyday service. Closing Prayer Holy God, thank you for remembering us, for holding us in your care, and for giving us dignity that is rooted in your love. Teach us to walk humbly in your world, to care well for the people and responsibilities you have placed before us, and to reflect your grace in all we do. In the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.

29. maj 20266 min