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The Gathering at Brock

Podcast by Jesse Tunnell

English

History & religion

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About The Gathering at Brock

Weekly sermons from The Gathering at Brock — a church in Weatherford, Texas built on the conviction that the kingdom of heaven is real, active, and breaking into everyday life. Each message is rooted in Scripture and delivered with honesty and a relentless call to surrender. Whether you're new to faith or have been walking with Jesus for decades, these teachings will challenge you to stop settling for a Sunday-only faith and start living fully devoted to what actually matters. Pull up a chair. This is church for real.🤠 Find Us We'd love to meet you in person. Coffee's on, doors are open. Wear what's comfortable. Bring your questions. The kingdom is breaking in — come see for yourself.🙏 Sundays9:00 AM — Soaking Service (intimate prayer & worship)10:00 AM — Corporate Worship (come 30 min early for coffee; kids check-in opens at 9:45)📍 1306 Dennis Road, Weatherford, TX 76087🌐 gatheringbrock.org📞 682-803-0731✉️ info@gatheringbrock.org

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5 episodes

episode Lessons About the Kingdom of Heaven from the Parable of the Fishing Net artwork

Lessons About the Kingdom of Heaven from the Parable of the Fishing Net

Episode Overview This is the final message in the kingdom parables series from Matthew 13, and Jesse brings it home with the parable of the fishing net — arguably the most sobering of all the parables. Against the backdrop of a growing revival movement and mission trips launching around the world, the message calls the church to lift its eyes from the immediate and fix them on the eternal. Three practical lessons emerge for anyone serious about kingdom living. 3 Key Takeaways 1. The kingdom has a timeline — live with an eternal perspective. The net gets pulled in when it's full. The end of the age isn't a theological abstraction; it's a fixed point on God's calendar. Jesse challenges a church drowning in advertising and immediate gratification to reorient everything — career, family, finances, daily routine — around the reality that Jesus is returning. Not as a source of anxiety, but as the lens that brings real life into focus. 2. Heaven and hell are real — the salvation of the lost must be a high priority. Jesus doesn't soften this one. The angels come, separate the wicked from the righteous, and the wicked are thrown into the fire. Jesse doesn't shy away from it, but he also doesn't weaponize it. His pastoral heart comes through in a raw, unscripted moment — recounting a conversation with a fellow officer who asked whether even an Auschwitz commandant could be forgiven. Jesse's answer: "Everyone wants justice for someone else and mercy for themselves." The gospel draws no lines on who's too far gone. The point lands hard: every person in our sphere of influence who doesn't know Jesus is our responsibility — not the pastor's, not the church's — ours. 3. The mature believer pursues fresh revelation without abandoning the foundation of Scripture — old and new.Closing out the entire parables section, Jesus tells his disciples that a kingdom person is like a homeowner who pulls treasures both old and new from the storehouse. Jesse uses this to push back against two equal and opposite failures: the Christian who's grown bored and cynical about God's word, and the one who only chases the next hot revelation on social media. The call is to build a storehouse — through faithful, daily, sometimes dry and unglamorous Bible reading — so that when the moment comes, you have something real to stand on. Faithfulness, he says, isn't measured by the passionate moments. It's measured by showing up in the drudgery. Memorable Quote "In that day, not one person connected to us should be able to say — no one shared the love of God and the gospel of Jesus Christ with me. That's our job."

17 May 2026 - 41 min
episode Lessons About the Kingdom of Heaven from the Parable of the Pearl of Great Price artwork

Lessons About the Kingdom of Heaven from the Parable of the Pearl of Great Price

Episode Overview On Mother's Day, Jesse opens with a word of encouragement for moms from Psalm 112 before diving into one of the shortest but most layered parables in Matthew 13 — the pearl of great price. He unpacks it from two directions at once: God as the merchant who found us and paid everything, and us as the merchant who must pursue the kingdom with everything. The message is a blend of deep gospel comfort and a no-excuses call to kingdom priority. 3 Key Takeaways 1. You are the pearl — God paid the highest price to have you back. Jesse flips the traditional reading of the parable to let the gospel land first. If God is the merchant, then we are the pearl he discovered in the deep, dark, muddy water — and paid everything to purchase. Romans 5 anchors it: while we were still enemies, still sinners, still powerless, Christ died for us. The pastoral moment here is direct and personal — aimed at anyone who has walked in so much compromise or shame that they no longer feel worth anything. The message: he loved you before you were shiny. 2. The kingdom must be the primary pursuit of your life — not a secondary convenience. Back to the traditional reading: we are the merchant. And the Greek word for looking — zeteo — means to seek, desire, endeavor, require. Not a casual glance. Jesse draws a sharp contrast between a full-time merchant whose entire livelihood depends on finding fine pearls and the version of American Christianity that tries to live like the world while tacking Christ's name onto it. The kingdom-first lifestyle isn't extreme — it's what Jesus actually said. 3. It is not crazy to sell everything for the kingdom — it's the wisest investment imaginable. Jesse introduces the Giga Pearl — a 75-pound, $100 million pearl discovered by a Filipino fisherman whose anchor got caught on it during a storm. The fisherman kept it under his bed in a burlap sack for 10 years, rubbing it for good luck, not knowing what he had. It was finally revealed to the world when his house caught fire. The parallel is impossible to miss: most Christians are sitting on the kingdom of heaven like a good luck charm, not realizing its worth. And it's fire — the fire of hardship and the fire of the Holy Spirit — that reveals it to the world. He closes with Jim Elliot's famous quote and a simple question: is the kingdom still under your bed? Memorable Quote "The pearl of the kingdom is often found when you're anchored in a storm."

10 May 2026 - 42 min
episode Lessons About the Kingdom of Heaven from the Parable of the Treasure artwork

Lessons About the Kingdom of Heaven from the Parable of the Treasure

Episode Overview One verse. Jesse takes the shortest of all the kingdom parables — a single sentence from Jesus — and draws out three rich, practical lessons about what it actually looks like to live as a kingdom person. The message is warm, self-deprecating, and deeply convicting, swinging between a story about guarding $750,000 in cash pulled from Saddam Hussein's hiding hole and missing a divine setup at the county dump. Classic Jesse. 3 Key Takeaways 1. The kingdom of heaven is a treasure chest — not a religion. The Greek word Jesus uses for treasure doesn't refer to gold or jewels but to the container that holds them — a coffer, a storehouse. Jesse unpacks what's inside: unshakable righteousness, peace, joy, and miracle-working power (the Greek dunamis — literally the root of the word dynamite). His point is blunt: the kingdom has almost nothing to do with church attendance or religious behavior. It has everything to do with the presence of Jesus walking into dark, chaotic places — and we're carrying it with us everywhere we go, like Dora's backpack. The problem is most believers don't act like it. 2. A kingdom person actively and intentionally seeks the kingdom wherever God has placed them. How did the man find a hidden treasure in somebody else's field? He was looking. Jesse takes Matthew 13's earlier warning about calloused eyes and ears and turns it into an invitation — blessed are your eyes because they see. Whether you're traveling through a dry season or grinding away at someone else's field, your greater purpose is always the kingdom. He caps it with a story about helping an elderly woman unload her truck at the county dumpster — then driving away without ever asking if she knew Jesus. His honest self-assessment: you idiot, that was a perfect setup. No condemnation. Just a plea for eyes to see and ears to hear in the moment. 3. The kingdom person is marked by joyful sacrifice — and the joy is what makes the sacrifice sustainable. Jesus says the man sold everything in his joy. Not reluctantly. Not under obligation. Jesse identifies two failure modes: people who are joyful because life is all about them, and Christians who sacrifice but do it bitterly and resentfully. The bridge between them is intimate relationship. Drawing on 25 years of marriage, raising kids, and caring for a dying aunt, he makes the case that when you genuinely love someone, the cost stops feeling like cost. The sacrifices of kingdom living are only unbearable when Jesus is a religious duty rather than a friend. If he's a man you're madly in love with — what hardship? Memorable Quote "It was never a sacrifice to me." Jesse's grandmother, speaking at her daughter's funeral after decades of round-the-clock caregiving — used as a picture of what joyful sacrifice looks like when it flows from love rather than duty.

3 May 2026 - 45 min
episode Lessons About Supernatural Kingdom Expansion from the Parable of the Mustard Seed artwork

Lessons About Supernatural Kingdom Expansion from the Parable of the Mustard Seed

Episode Overview Pastor Jesse opens with a church-wide challenge called "Operation Andrew" — every member praying for 10 unsaved people in their lives and actively pursuing mission. From there, he dives into one of Jesus' briefest but most explosive parables: the mustard seed. The message is simple and convicting — the kingdom of God was never meant to stay small, and the responsibility to grow it belongs to every believer, not just the pastor. 3 Key Takeaways 1. The kingdom of God was created to expand exponentially — stop settling for less. Jesse unpacks the difference between the common mustard plant (2–4 feet tall) and the mustard tree native to the Middle East — the Salvadora Persica — which grows to 20–25 feet from the tiniest seed imaginable. Jesus' point: the kingdom starts microscopic but ends enormous. The problem isn't God's plan. It's that we dream too small and think too small, trying to fit an infinite kingdom into a finite religious box. 2. The seed must be intentionally taken hold of and planted — it produces nothing as a concept. Theology alone is a seed in your pocket. Jesse draws on his wife Jill's two-and-a-half days of soil prep for a backyard canoe garden as a picture of what honoring the seed actually looks like — breaking hard ground, removing weeds, fertilizing. Kingdom fruitfulness requires soft soil, intentional planting, and continual care. He specifically calls out bitterness, offense, and unforgiveness as the most destructive "pests" to kingdom productivity — warning that they don't just rot your own fruit, they spread to the people around you. 3. The whole purpose of maturing in the kingdom is so others can find a home in it. Using the Greek word kataskēnoō — meaning to fix one's dwelling, to make a home — Jesse makes the point that the birds nesting in the mustard tree aren't just decorative. They're the lost people in your life looking for somewhere safe to land. The world doesn't need to be convinced by argument; they need to taste the fruit of the kingdom in your life. First from a distance. Then closer. Then they move in. Memorable Quote "You're plan A and there's no plan B. There are people in your life that will only get fruit from you."

12 Apr 2026 - 45 min
episode How to be Changed by the Resurrection of Jesus artwork

How to be Changed by the Resurrection of Jesus

Episode Overview In this Easter message, Pastor Jesse opens with a candid confession — that for much of his life, the resurrection was just a story he'd heard thousands of times without it truly changing him. This sermon is his challenge to the church: don't let the resurrection be a holiday. Let it be a transformation. Drawing from 1 Corinthians 15:51–58, he walks through four practical ways the resurrection of Jesus can change your life — right now, on this side of eternity. 4 Key Takeaways 1. Receive total victory over sin and death through salvation. The resurrection isn't just a historical event — it's the greatest rescue mission in history. Using a striking parallel to a real-time Easter Sunday military rescue of a downed airman in Iran, Jesse draws the contrast: we weren't innocent soldiers shot down in enemy territory. We defected. And Jesus came anyway. 2. Become consistently immovable from the cares of this world. The world is shaky, deceptive, and unstable. What it needs is a church that doesn't sway. Jesse shares a hilarious and relatable story of completely losing his composure when he misread a text from his son in Navy training — and uses it as an honest mirror: am I actually immovable, or do I just preach it? 3. Remain fully devoted to the kingdom of God over your own desires. We all build kingdoms — careers, comfort, hobbies, security. But Paul's words leave no wiggle room: "Always give yourselves fully to the work of the Lord." Jesse shares a vulnerable season of personal spiritual coasting and the journal prayer of repentance that followed. 4. Enjoy a life of true meaning, purpose, and significance. Meriwether Lewis mapped 8,000 miles of uncharted territory, was celebrated as a national hero — and took his own life two years later. Success without eternal purpose is empty. Jesse shares how a personal encounter with God in 2007 shifted his entire identity from what he does to whose he is — and how that peace changed everything. Memorable Quote "You can have the same job, same house, same family — and wake up tomorrow with total peace — because you said, 'Whatever you put in my hands, Lord, I'm surrendered to you and I work for your kingdom through this tool you gave me.'"

5 Apr 2026 - 54 min
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