Turning Point Church Podcast

Stewardship In Praise | Turning Point Podcast 4/26/26

40 min · 30. apr. 2026
episode Stewardship In Praise | Turning Point Podcast 4/26/26 cover

Beskrivelse

This powerful message invites us into a transformative understanding of stewardship that goes far beyond managing our finances—it's about cultivating a heart of praise and recognizing that everything we have belongs to God. The service opens with an extraordinary move of worship, reminding us that praise isn't just expected in comfortable places like temples and palaces, but especially in our prisons and dungeons. Like Paul and Silas, we're called to praise even in our darkest moments, because God doesn't smell our trouble—He smells our praise. The message then weaves together the parable of the ten virgins and the parable of the talents from Matthew 25, revealing a stunning connection: both are about readiness and faithful stewardship. The five wise virgins had extra oil, preparing for the bridegroom's coming, while the faithful servants multiplied what was entrusted to them. We're challenged to understand that God's idea of stewardship isn't about maintaining what we have—it's about multiplying it. We were created to care about the things of God and to care for the things of God. This double meaning transforms how we view everything in our lives: our gifts, our resources, our worship, and even our praise. The signs of the times are announcing that the Bridegroom is coming, and now is the moment to be ready with oil in our lamps.

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48 episoder

episode Build The Alter | Turning Point Podcast 6/21/26 cover

Build The Alter | Turning Point Podcast 6/21/26

This powerful message centers on a compelling call from God: Build the altar. Drawing from the story of Jacob in Genesis, we discover how altars serve as sacred meeting places where heaven touches earth. Jacob encountered God at Bethel, built an altar of remembrance, and years later returned to find it still standing. This reveals a profound truth: when we build altars to honor God, they remain as testimonies of His faithfulness even when we wander away. The message challenges us to examine what we are actually building with our lives. Are we constructing empty structures that satisfy temporary desires, or are we building altars of worship, sacrifice, and covenant? Every person is building something, but only what is built for God will endure the testing fire. The altar represents the place of slaughter and furnace, where sacrifices are consumed and transformed into a sweet aroma pleasing to the Lord. In the New Testament era, we are called to be a priesthood of believers, maintaining the fire on the altar of our hearts. This means redirecting our resources, time, and talents away from temporary pursuits and toward eternal purposes. When we build altars in our homes and lives, we create spaces where God's glory rests, where future generations will ask what happened here, and we can testify: This is where we met God.

I går35 min
episode When The Lord Speaks To You 6-7-26 | Turning Point Podcast cover

When The Lord Speaks To You 6-7-26 | Turning Point Podcast

This powerful message reminds us that we are called to be spiritual powerhouses in our communities, not just passive observers of what God is doing. The imagery of being a 'power plant' planted by God himself speaks to our divine purpose—we're designed to generate spiritual energy that lights up dark places and brings life to stagnant situations. What's particularly compelling is the connection between corporate and individual calling. When God speaks to the church as a whole, He's simultaneously speaking to each of us personally. We can't disconnect ourselves from the larger mission by thinking we're too small to make a difference. The rescue operation isn't just a church program—it's our personal assignment. Every conversation we have, every interaction at work or in the grocery store, is an opportunity to be salt and light. The challenge confronts our tendency to pray for things we're unwilling to participate in ourselves. When we ask God to send someone to reach the lost, He's asking, 'Are you available?' This isn't about guilt—it's about recognizing that we're already talking to people anyway. The question becomes: what are we saying? Are we speaking life or death? Are we communicating truth or passing along error? The message calls us to take responsibility for what we allow into our hearts and what flows out of our mouths, reminding us that our individual 'yes' to God creates a ripple effect that can influence an entire region.

8. juni 202639 min
episode I Know The Plans 5-11-26 | Turning Point Podcast cover

I Know The Plans 5-11-26 | Turning Point Podcast

This powerful message centers on the profound truth that God's plans for our lives are infinitely better than anything we could devise ourselves. Drawing from Jeremiah 29:1-14, we're reminded that even when the Israelites found themselves in exile—far from home, living as captives in Babylon—God hadn't abandoned them. Instead, He gave them specific instructions: build houses, plant gardens, marry, multiply, and pray for the prosperity of the very place that held them captive. What seems like a contradiction reveals a deeper spiritual principle: God was orchestrating something far beyond their immediate circumstances. He was positioning them for a future they couldn't yet see, planting synagogues and God-fearing communities throughout the region that would later become launching points for the gospel. The exile wasn't just punishment; it was preparation. This speaks directly to our own seasons of difficulty and displacement. When we feel exiled from our dreams, our comfort, or our expectations, God is still working a plan that extends far beyond our present moment. The famous promise in Jeremiah 29:11—plans to prosper us, not to harm us, plans for hope and a future—wasn't given in a season of blessing but in the midst of captivity. Our calling is to seek Him with all our hearts, not just portions of ourselves, trusting that His word never returns void and His plans encompass not just our immediate needs but generations to come.

26. maj 202638 min
episode Stewardship In Praise | Turning Point Podcast 4/26/26 cover

Stewardship In Praise | Turning Point Podcast 4/26/26

This powerful message invites us into a transformative understanding of stewardship that goes far beyond managing our finances—it's about cultivating a heart of praise and recognizing that everything we have belongs to God. The service opens with an extraordinary move of worship, reminding us that praise isn't just expected in comfortable places like temples and palaces, but especially in our prisons and dungeons. Like Paul and Silas, we're called to praise even in our darkest moments, because God doesn't smell our trouble—He smells our praise. The message then weaves together the parable of the ten virgins and the parable of the talents from Matthew 25, revealing a stunning connection: both are about readiness and faithful stewardship. The five wise virgins had extra oil, preparing for the bridegroom's coming, while the faithful servants multiplied what was entrusted to them. We're challenged to understand that God's idea of stewardship isn't about maintaining what we have—it's about multiplying it. We were created to care about the things of God and to care for the things of God. This double meaning transforms how we view everything in our lives: our gifts, our resources, our worship, and even our praise. The signs of the times are announcing that the Bridegroom is coming, and now is the moment to be ready with oil in our lamps.

30. apr. 202640 min
episode The Trap Of Logic 3-22-26 | Turning Point Podcast cover

The Trap Of Logic 3-22-26 | Turning Point Podcast

This powerful message confronts one of the most deceptive traps believers face: the trap of logic. We discover that while God has given us the ability to reason, think, and analyze, these gifts become dangerous when they limit our faith in the miraculous. The sermon walks us through three breathtaking biblical accounts—the parting of the Red Sea, Jesus walking on water, and the promise of His return—to illustrate a profound truth: the God we serve operates beyond human understanding. We're challenged to examine whether we've been defending our ability to make sense of things more than we've been defending our faith. The message reveals how our desire to be seen as reasonable, grounded, and accepted by the world can become a form of self-preservation that keeps us from experiencing the fullness of God's power. Isaiah 55 reminds us that God's thoughts are not our thoughts, and His ways are not our ways—they're infinitely higher. This isn't about abandoning wisdom, but about refusing to let human reasoning become an idol that steals our belief in the impossible. When we say we believe in God, we're saying we believe in a God who defies physics, who translates people from one city to another instantly, who raises the dead, and who will one day return in glory. The question we must answer is this: are we willing to let go of our need to understand everything so we can take hold of what God has for us?

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