Trinity Community Church

Equipped To Stand - Session 1 - Ebenezer Asiamah

17 min · 10 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio Equipped To Stand - Session 1 - Ebenezer Asiamah

Descripción

If you’ve ever felt pressure to appear strong while carrying grief, uncertainty, disappointment, or exhaustion beneath the surface, this session offers a biblical perspective on where true strength is found. Speaker Ebenezer Asiamah explores Ephesians 6:10, “Be strong in the Lord and in the power of his might,” challenging common assumptions about strength and inviting us to see it through the lens of God’s grace. Strength in the Lord is not a personality trait, emotional toughness, or the ability to hide weakness. It is a deep, inward steadiness rooted in our position in Christ and sustained by God’s power at work in our lives. Throughout this session, we examine why Paul’s use of the word “finally” in Ephesians matters, how spiritual warfare can become confusing when we are not grounded in the gospel, and why Scripture consistently points believers away from self-reliance. Drawing from 1 Corinthians 1 and Romans 5, we trace the pattern of God choosing the weak, sustaining the weak, and receiving the glory so that no one can boast in themselves. We also explore the connection between spiritual strength and intimacy with God through abiding in Christ (John 15), cultivating fellowship with Him, and discovering how the joy of the Lord becomes a genuine source of resilience that grows through worship, prayer, and allowing the Word of Christ to dwell richly within us. The session also focuses on David’s experience at Ziklag, a defining moment marked by loss, fear, blame, and uncertainty. Faced with circumstances that could have driven him to panic, David instead “strengthened himself in the Lord.” His response provides a practical model for believers today: pause before reacting, seek God’s presence, inquire of Him for direction, and trust Him to provide both the wisdom and strength needed for the path ahead. Through David’s example, we discover how God meets His people in seasons of weakness and equips them to move forward in faith. Whether you are navigating personal challenges, spiritual battles, difficult decisions, or simply seeking a deeper understanding of what it means to be strong in the Lord, this session offers biblical encouragement and practical insight for building a life anchored in God’s strength rather than your own. We are Trinity Community Church [https://tccknox.com/] in Knoxville, Tennessee. Subscribe to our Podcast [https://trinitycommunitychurch.buzzsprout.com/] & YouTube [https://www.youtube.com/c/TrinityCommunityChurch?sub_confirmation=1] channel to find past sermons, classes, interviews, and more! Find us on Facebook [https://www.facebook.com/tccknox/] & Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/trinitycommunitychurch/]

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421 episodios

Portada del episodio Equipped To Stand - Session 1 - Ebenezer Asiamah

Equipped To Stand - Session 1 - Ebenezer Asiamah

If you’ve ever felt pressure to appear strong while carrying grief, uncertainty, disappointment, or exhaustion beneath the surface, this session offers a biblical perspective on where true strength is found. Speaker Ebenezer Asiamah explores Ephesians 6:10, “Be strong in the Lord and in the power of his might,” challenging common assumptions about strength and inviting us to see it through the lens of God’s grace. Strength in the Lord is not a personality trait, emotional toughness, or the ability to hide weakness. It is a deep, inward steadiness rooted in our position in Christ and sustained by God’s power at work in our lives. Throughout this session, we examine why Paul’s use of the word “finally” in Ephesians matters, how spiritual warfare can become confusing when we are not grounded in the gospel, and why Scripture consistently points believers away from self-reliance. Drawing from 1 Corinthians 1 and Romans 5, we trace the pattern of God choosing the weak, sustaining the weak, and receiving the glory so that no one can boast in themselves. We also explore the connection between spiritual strength and intimacy with God through abiding in Christ (John 15), cultivating fellowship with Him, and discovering how the joy of the Lord becomes a genuine source of resilience that grows through worship, prayer, and allowing the Word of Christ to dwell richly within us. The session also focuses on David’s experience at Ziklag, a defining moment marked by loss, fear, blame, and uncertainty. Faced with circumstances that could have driven him to panic, David instead “strengthened himself in the Lord.” His response provides a practical model for believers today: pause before reacting, seek God’s presence, inquire of Him for direction, and trust Him to provide both the wisdom and strength needed for the path ahead. Through David’s example, we discover how God meets His people in seasons of weakness and equips them to move forward in faith. Whether you are navigating personal challenges, spiritual battles, difficult decisions, or simply seeking a deeper understanding of what it means to be strong in the Lord, this session offers biblical encouragement and practical insight for building a life anchored in God’s strength rather than your own. We are Trinity Community Church [https://tccknox.com/] in Knoxville, Tennessee. Subscribe to our Podcast [https://trinitycommunitychurch.buzzsprout.com/] & YouTube [https://www.youtube.com/c/TrinityCommunityChurch?sub_confirmation=1] channel to find past sermons, classes, interviews, and more! Find us on Facebook [https://www.facebook.com/tccknox/] & Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/trinitycommunitychurch/]

10 de jun de 202617 min
Portada del episodio Speaking in Tongues

Speaking in Tongues

In this Pastors Choice message, Pastor Tyler Lynde takes on one of the most misunderstood and debated gifts of the Holy Spirit: speaking in tongues. Rather than letting fear, hype, mockery, or past church experiences shape the conversation, Tyler turns to 1 Corinthians 14 and lets Scripture set the tone. Paul’s teaching gives a balanced framework: personal tongues is prayer to God that builds up the believer, while public tongues must be interpreted so the church can be strengthened. Above every gift, love remains the true measure of spiritual maturity. Tyler also shares personally about a season nearly 25 years ago when a complete nervous breakdown left him unable to think clearly, read Scripture normally, drive, play with his children, or carry on ordinary conversations. In that place of mental and emotional exhaustion, praying in tongues became a lifeline. It allowed him to remain in communion with God when his mind had no words left to offer. That testimony gives a deeply pastoral lens to the topic, showing tongues not as a spiritual status symbol or strange spectacle, but as a gift that can sustain prayer, praise, and connection with God in moments of weakness. From there, Tyler traces the biblical story of language from Eden’s communion, to Babel’s confusion, to Pentecost’s Spirit-filled reversal, where people from many nations heard the gospel in their own languages. He explains why tongues should not be treated as proof that someone is saved, filled with the Spirit, or more spiritual than another believer. He also challenges the idea that speaking in tongues is inherently weird, irrational, or out of control. According to Paul, spiritual gifts are meant to operate with humility, order, doctrine, and the goal of building up the church. Tyler addresses practical questions for anyone who desires this gift: Do you need to be afraid? Will you lose control? Do you have to turn off your mind? Do you need gimmicks or pressure to “prime the pump”? His encouragement is simple: ask, seek, knock, persevere in prayer, devote time to praise, and trust the Father who gives good gifts to His children. Whether you already pray in tongues, have questions, or are cautious because of past teaching or experience, this message invites a Scripture-first, love-centered, Spirit-dependent approach to the gifts of God. We are Trinity Community Church [https://tccknox.com/] in Knoxville, Tennessee. Subscribe to our Podcast [https://trinitycommunitychurch.buzzsprout.com/] & YouTube [https://www.youtube.com/c/TrinityCommunityChurch?sub_confirmation=1] channel to find past sermons, classes, interviews, and more! Find us on Facebook [https://www.facebook.com/tccknox/] & Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/trinitycommunitychurch/]

7 de jun de 202646 min
Portada del episodio In Christ - The Armor Of God

In Christ - The Armor Of God

Mark Medley closes our eight‑month walk through Ephesians in the In Christ series with a message many know by name but often miss in practice: the armor of God. Walking slowly through Ephesians 6:10–20, Mark shows that Paul is not calling us to hype ourselves up, but to stand firm in the strength of the Lord and in a victory Jesus has already secured. The struggle is real, but it is not against flesh and blood. That framing matters, because it moves us away from blaming people and toward depending on Christ’s finished work, daily obedience, and persistent prayer. To make that point vivid, Mark begins with Hiroo Onoda, the Japanese officer who kept fighting for decades because he didn’t know the war was over. It becomes a mirror: how often do we battle fear, shame, temptation, or anxiety as if Jesus hasn’t already triumphed over the powers? Ephesians opened with grace, adoption, forgiveness, and being raised with Christ; it ends with armor that is God’s own provision, purchased by our King, for living out what is already true. Mark then turns to Joshua Lawrence Chamberlain at Gettysburg to show that victory rarely begins on the day of crisis. Habits formed over time determine who we are when the hour strikes. That insight matches the shape of Ephesians: grounded in the Father’s love and the Son’s work, strengthened in a Spirit‑filled community, and expressed through a disciplined “walk” in light, wisdom, unity, love, and good works. Those rhythms prepare us to withstand “the evil day.” From there, the armor becomes clear in the light of the whole letter and the wider Scriptures: truth that holds everything together and unmasks lies; righteousness both given to us and walked out; the gospel of peace that steadies us with peace with God and peace with one another; faith that is God’s gift and our confidence in His faithfulness; salvation that guards the mind as we actively remember the finished work of Jesus; and the Word of God, both the settled Scriptures and the timely word the Spirit brings to heart as we stay in the Bible. None of this is random gear; it is the application of the gospel. Finally, Mark lands where Paul lands: prayer. We need brothers and sisters in arms, perseverance, and boldness for gospel witness. If you’ve felt tired, attacked, or isolated, this message is a reset for your mind and a reminder that you do not fight alone. Share it with someone you’re praying for and take a fresh stand, in Christ. We are Trinity Community Church [https://tccknox.com/] in Knoxville, Tennessee. Subscribe to our Podcast [https://trinitycommunitychurch.buzzsprout.com/] & YouTube [https://www.youtube.com/c/TrinityCommunityChurch?sub_confirmation=1] channel to find past sermons, classes, interviews, and more! Find us on Facebook [https://www.facebook.com/tccknox/] & Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/trinitycommunitychurch/]

31 de may de 202638 min
Portada del episodio In Christ - Struggles

In Christ - Struggles

Life does not always follow a straight line. Returning from sabbatical, Kelly Kinder begins Struggles in the In Christ series with a simple image from his three-year-old granddaughter—a single squiggly line—and names what many feel: ordinary days can quickly become complicated. From there, he opens Ephesians 6:10-13 and gives a different lens for what we face. Kelly explains that Scripture calls us to recognize an unseen battle without giving in to fear. The focus is clarity and preparation: be strong in the Lord, put on the whole armor of God, know your real enemy, and never surrender. Kelly unpacks what it means to be strong in the Lord, not by forcing confidence, but by being continually strengthened by Jesus through a living relationship with him. Strength grows through prayer, Scripture, worship, and life with the church. He also describes the “strength of his might” as an inner, Spirit-formed capacity—a battle-ready heart marked by resilience and endurance. Drawing on Paul’s “thorn in the flesh,” Kelly shows how grace proves sufficient precisely where we feel least capable, and how God’s power often becomes most visible when we stop pretending we can handle everything alone. Then comes the practical warning and promise. Kelly urges us to put on the whole armor of God because the enemy’s schemes are real and often target our predictable vulnerabilities—when we are tired, isolated, angry, or overconfident. He names the battleground of the mind and the everyday footholds that widen the opening, like unchecked anger, falsehood, and unwholesome talk. Just as important, Kelly reframes conflict: people are not the enemy. Behind the scenes are organized, invisible spiritual forces; misunderstanding this leaves us fighting the wrong battles. Anchoring the message in hope, Kelly points to Paul’s own imprisonment and how God used it to advance the gospel, then shares a personal story of provision during a nine-month season of uncertainty. The thread is steady: in the “evil day,” the goal is not flash but faithfulness—stand firm, refuse to surrender, and remember that through Christ we are more than conquerors. If you’re weary, confused, or tempted to quit, this teaching offers honest realism, practical steps, and Christ-centered courage for whatever you are facing today. We are Trinity Community Church [https://tccknox.com/] in Knoxville, Tennessee. Subscribe to our Podcast [https://trinitycommunitychurch.buzzsprout.com/] & YouTube [https://www.youtube.com/c/TrinityCommunityChurch?sub_confirmation=1] channel to find past sermons, classes, interviews, and more! Find us on Facebook [https://www.facebook.com/tccknox/] & Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/trinitycommunitychurch/]

24 de may de 202650 min
Portada del episodio In Christ - Working for The Man

In Christ - Working for The Man

If you’ve ever hummed along to 9 to 5 or Take This Job and Shove It and felt that knot in your stomach about Monday, Scott Wiens offers a different chorus. In this message from the In Christ series, Scott walks into Ephesians 6:5-9 with both honesty and hope, asking what it really means to work “as unto the Lord” when your boss is unfair, your efforts go unnoticed, or your attitude is fraying at the edges. Scott begins with the hard question many avoid: why does the Bible talk about bondservants and masters? He slows down to explain the first-century context of doulos, how servitude functioned in the ancient world, and why the gospel never blesses exploitation. He names slavery as evil, connects the conversation to modern human trafficking, and points to Scripture’s wider witness that condemns enslavers (1 Timothy 1:8-11), levels status distinctions in Christ (Galatians 3:28), and sows seeds of liberation in relationships like Philemon and Onesimus. Far from endorsing oppression, the good news redefines power through the cross and insists that God shows no partiality. Then the text gets close to home. Serving “with fear and trembling” becomes reverent seriousness before God, not terror of human bosses. Paul exposes “eye-service” and people-pleasing as counterfeit discipleship, calling for obedience, integrity, and sincere work that flows from a changed heart. Scott names the everyday compromises we’re tempted to excuse—gossip, disrespect, cutting corners, or stealing because we feel owed—and he shows how separating faith from work quietly silences our witness. The promise of reward in Ephesians 6 matters too: God sees unseen faithfulness now and will make it count in eternity, without turning work into a way to earn salvation. Leaders don’t escape the mirror. “Masters, stop your threatening” confronts coercive management and invites servant leadership shaped by the truth that every person answers to the same Master in heaven. In Christ, authority is exercised with dignity, restraint, and care. If your Mondays need meaning, Scott offers a path that is both spiritual and practical: ask the Spirit to renew your heart, choose words and habits that honor Jesus, and let your consistency at work become a credible testimony. Watch and share with a friend who could use a reset on the job, and consider what the hardest part of living out your faith at work looks like for you this week. We are Trinity Community Church [https://tccknox.com/] in Knoxville, Tennessee. Subscribe to our Podcast [https://trinitycommunitychurch.buzzsprout.com/] & YouTube [https://www.youtube.com/c/TrinityCommunityChurch?sub_confirmation=1] channel to find past sermons, classes, interviews, and more! Find us on Facebook [https://www.facebook.com/tccknox/] & Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/trinitycommunitychurch/]

17 de may de 202646 min